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Here are a few more photos from the weekend on Capitol Hill through other people's lenses. I'll try to add some more shots on Monday when more 'crowd sourced' images hit the Internet. More pictures from me, here. Try Try Try again Originally uploaded by swooshthesnail Julia's Block Party Capitol Hill 2-27-09 012 Originally uploaded by gomi_otaku Mayoral Candidate Jan Drago Originally uploaded by Essentialarity Mr. Nude Seattle Originally uploaded by Essentialarity Pride 2009 Random Models at Cal Anderson Originally uploaded by Norskette
The Capitol Hill Pride Festival is happening as you read this. Turn lanes are a walkway, restaurants have moved their tables onto the streets and the music and more is just getting started. It all makes way for the Dyke March later tonight. Meanwhile, Cal Anderson Park's morning of Equalityoga attracted around 300 practitioners to the turf-covered sanctuary of Bobby Morris play field. Friday started off Pride weekend with Bend It Extravaganza bands like The Redwood Plan rocking sunshine in Cal Anderson and party people remembering Michael Jackson on the streets of Pike/Pine: On the safety side of things, the 911 logs for the area were mostly incident free with only a few aid response dispatches overnight. Things were less calm elsewhere in the city including a shooting the Sodo and fights and more breaking up a large party in Greenwood last night. Capitol Hill fun continues today with events like the Equalityoga gathering this morning (State senator Ed Murray will be there, according to this yogi), also in Cal Anderson, the Capitol Hill Pride Festival on Broadway and the Dyke March later this afternoon. Get the complete Seattle Gay News event guide to Pride here. Street closure list here.
Seattle Gay News was kind enough to share their 2009 Pride Events Calendar with us for your downloading pleasure. As we say around here, if you print it, share it. Have a happy Pride.
The 2009 Pride parade marshals all have Capitol Hill ties, of course, but we're happy to see inked stained wretch George Bakan will be again doing his best parade wave this weekend. There's George doing his 'parade clap' back in 2007. More about Bakan and the 2009 marshals here:
Though I hate it when big protests and important events are reduced to traffic reports about what street is blocked and how bad traffic is, this weekend's street activities on the Hill and just beyond are crazy enough to justify the approach. Here is Pride weekend through the prism of the Seattle Department of Transportation's street closure report: Friday, June 27 Saturday, June 27 : 1 p.m. - 2 a.m. (Sunday) Capitol Hill 1518 11th Avenue 1,000 expected... Some buzz from some organizers about this year's Pride being the 'serious Pride' or 'political Pride.' How about 'Green Pride'? Organizers from OUT for Sustainability are working hard to make sure this year's celebration will be a ecologically responsible one. Director Gerod Rody passes along this "Green(er) Pride Guide" to, as Rody puts it, improve "your sustainability impact at LGBTQ Pride this year."
Speaking of Cal Anderson's Orange Man, he might want to swing by Purr Cocktail Lounge on Tuesday. The lounge is celebrating Pride by teaming up with design group Kwanchai for a week of interior designs in each color of the spectrum. We bring this promo to your attention not just because Kwanchai and Purr did a great job marketing it (they did! see below) but to also remind that Pride -- for the businesses and the celebration -- is more than this coming weekend's events. Back to the marketing, as if the Purr color theme wasn't enough, the whole shebang is also green:
Sometimes, the more audacious the plan, the more likely it is to work. Here are this plan's elements:
The whole crazy thing moved one step closer to reality this week as the city has given its OK on #3 -- as far as the city's concerns with the event go, the Capitol Hill Pride Festival 2009 on Broadway, Sat. June 27th from 11am—4pm is a go. We told you about the planned festival last month before the Capitol Hill Community Council's meeting to determine go/no-go on the effort. The community vote at that meeting approved moving ahead with planning. Full disclosure: I currently chair the council and I was against early versions of council vice president... Three years ago, two groups tussled over the future of Seattle's annual Gay Pride events. This Seattle Times lays out the struggle at the time -- one group seeking to move the celebration downtown for a bigger event, the other seeking to preserve the tradition of celebrating in the heart of the city's gay community. Long story, short, the downtown celebration grew and the Capitol Hill celebration became a smaller but still vital effort. Now, a committee of the Capitol Hill Community Council -- a group that I chair -- is considering plans for again staging a larger Pride effort on Capitol Hill.
Miss the pride dyke march on Broadway today? I didn't even know it was happening, and only figured it out because some people had set up chairs in front of the Urban Outfitters. Thanks random strangers! Here's some pictures in a handy-dandy Flickr Set. We don't have a gay channel on CHS -- we're organized around geography. Besides, we wouldn't want to try to compete with Bill W.'s creation which is undergoing a makeover just in time for Pride. Gay Seattle Blogspot is now SeattleGayScene.com. Bill W. says the transition is till in process and is all about design and brand. The site mission remains the same -- as Bill W. puts it, delivering "the real meat of everything that's happening." With all the buzz around Pride Week, consider the new unveiling your online component. The Seattle Times' "Best Place to Sink A Battleship" is kicking off Pride Weekend by having a "Traditional Hot Dog Blessing" on Friday June 26 at 10 p.m: "Join us at the BottleNeck Lounge on Friday, June 27th as we kick-off Gay Pride Weekend with a very special Happy Hour (4-7PM) followed by the Second Annual Hot Dog Blessing at 10 PM. The blessing is open to all, and heralds a weekend of free hot dogs at the BottleNeck - we'll be serving up weenies from 4-9PM on both Saturday and Sunday." Written in the past about the need for Capitol Hill to come up with some new traditions, Pride and otherwise. Here's a new one via Q Seattle for Capitol Hill and the rest of the city -- Pridefeast:
Participating Hill restaurants include Cafe Stellina, Capitol Club, Julia's, Quinn's and tidbit -- btw, tidbit says it's celebrating all week so stop by there any night. Looks like the another dine out for charity night to add to your calendar after you eat for Darfur, AIDS/HIV and the rest. No worries. You can do a charity walk next.
Brodeur has a nice column today on the Alano Club's annual fundraiser, "Bat N' Rouge". This softball extravaganza will take place Saturday June 14 at 4 p.m. at the Bobby Morris Play Field at Cal Anderson Park.
Image courtesy of sea turtle via Flickr Creative Commons
Volunteer Park and Capitol Hill will be parade-less this summer. Talking with people about the situation, I've been asked a few times if I would push for someone to step in, pony up and help restore the annual Pride event.
I won't. But not because I think there shouldn't be a Pride event or that I don't see the value in something like the parade bringing neighbors and people from around the city together in the neighborhood to have a good time, celebrate and, yes, enjoy our local businesses. It would be a shame to cling to something that has moved on and seems to be doing quite well. We should think of something new for Capitol Hill -- and, no, I haven't thought of it yet. But there are new things to rally around like Sustainable Capitol Hill's summer festival or some sort of FREE alternative to the fenced-in Capitol Hill Block Party. Does it really need to be a parade? Maybe. Does it have to be to become an important showcase of Capitol Hill culture, arts and people? Probably not. Let's march forward and see what...
Looks like more problems for the Capitol Hill and Volunteer Park version of Seattle's annual Pride Parade:
The Seattle LGBT Community Center, which last year stepped forward to keep a gay Pride march and festival on Capitol Hill after the traditional sponsors moved the annual event downtown, is struggling to pay its suppliers.Probably reopens the discussion about consolidating on one parade. A compromise parade can start downtown and finish in Volunteer Park. It would be quite a climb but maybe technology can save the day.
Catching up on a busy June weekend.
OK, neighborhood old-timers, spill it. How bad is parking and traffic around Volunteer Park going to be this weekend with Pride festivities in the area? There was no parade up here our first summer on the Hill so we're not sure what to expect. From what we've heard from some, enterprising Capitol Hill children should augment their lemonade sales with valet parking services on Saturday. Take Route 10, parade people!
--j/k
Sounds like Capitol Hill's contribution to Seattle Pride needs some help. The Seattle LGBT Community Center is looking for volunteers to help with this weekend's events. Busy?
--j/k
Last week's Fremont Solstice Parade reminded us of the coolest thing about parades -- watching people. We get our very own show here on Capitol Hill as one of Seattle's two Pride parades this weekend takes over Broadway -- and then Volunteer Park -- on Saturday. As this set of photos from the 2005 parade by flickr user djwudi illustrates, the parade should be full of all sorts of people.
--j/k
Here is some more nostalgia for you from the old days. Volunteer Park, 1996.
Seattle must be really proud this year because we're having two pride parades. CHS is not going to pick a side but we do agree that it's not a good thing to have two parades. If nothing else, it damages unity. People who really, really care will have to march 2x this year. That's a lot of marching. For now, Pride returns to its Capitol Hill roots. We asked Robin Evans from TTCA.org if he had any photos of Volunteer Park from the parade's "old" days. Apparently not easily offended, Robin sent us a few he dug up and uploaded to Flickr. Thanks Robin. --j
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