You booked your gay cruise and now just have to solve the question of, “What do I bring with me?” First off, calm down and have a cocktail...
Read MoreKevin Aviance and Marti Gould Cummings delight P-town crowds with the opening night of their new show, Audition. We were on hand for the debut - check it out for yourself!
Read MoreYou may think it is a cliche, that most gays spend their Saturday/Sunday early afternoons at Brunch, but you are wrong. We do. We love brunch like we love a sale at Barney’s.
Read MoreMarketing on LinkedIn? But I thought that was just for resumes and professional networking? Not even close! LinkedIn has some unique features that allow you to do some really targeted marketing to the gay community.
Read More10 years. Wow. It is hard to believe that it has ONLY been 10 years that same-sex couples have had the right to marry in MA, the first state to legally allow it.
Read MoreA mom to a gay man is a bit different.
She was the one who helped us up when we felt like an outsider amongst our peers at school.
And the one that encouraged us to do the things that we wanted - like dance and paint and sing and things society didn't want us to do.
She made us feel special when we didn't make the team or get the date with the girl.
Provincetown has long been a popular vacation destination for LGBT travelers, and the best-known gay spot on the East Coast. For over 100 years, “P-town” (as it has been nicknamed over the years) has been home to an exciting artist’s colony as well as experimental theatre with Drag Queens on stage as early as the 1940’s. In 1916, the Boston Globe acknowledged Provincetown’s status in the art community with its front page article titled, “Biggest Art Colony in the World in Provincetown.” This helped encourage the gay and lesbian presence to flourish in the 1920’s and 1930’s as artists, actors, novelists, poets, and radicals all began to summer in town.
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