Panic at the disco: A new novel examines the queer mid-life crisis in a uniquely beautiful way
I Make Envy on Your Disco follows a gay man navigating an existential crisis against the lush, electric backdrop of Berlin.
January 17, 2025
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I Make Envy on Your Disco follows a gay man navigating an existential crisis against the lush, electric backdrop of Berlin.
Five queer meccas that offer something for every gay traveler, even in the off-season.
Downtown Los Angeles hot spot Edison -- tucked in the depths of the historic Higgins Building -- is the showcase for a new hypersexualized vaudeville performance troupe.
Some cities, like Tokyo dazzle. Others, like Delhi sweep you through their cultural undercurrents until you surface back home, gasping and delighted. Berlin, more than any, seduces -- and there is a massive queer ex-pat community to prove it!
The artists, who have both spoken out against Trump, join several others who've nixed performing for him.
From Pride events to nude wrestling seminars, here's a listing of cool--and hot--events for this summer
Daniella Carter evoked Kurt Cobain's LGBTQ+ activism in her recording of "Something in the Way."
After a year of advancements and celebration for gay and lesbian Colombians, the community takes to the streets of Bogota for the country's biggest pride ever.
Rock star Bob Mould is the anti-Morrissey; the former member of seminal bands like Husker Du and Sugar is polite, muscular, and openly gay -- and he brought down the house at Coachella.
Hightail it to the country's coolest country bars.
In his new novel, Goodbye Heiko, Goodbye Berlin, Stonewall veteran Owen Levy explores a bittersweet gay romance amid the chaos of post-World War II Germany.
Sex with straights. Oral pleasure. What are the rules of virginity for gay people?
President Obama's inaugural poet remembers and honors the victims of the Pulse shooting.
West Hollywood's new Andaz Hotel is an isle of style in a gaudy Sunset sea.
Christopher Marlowe's Edward II is revived by The Red Bull Theater in New York City and, as Don Shewey discovers, suffers from trying to make a gay play "gayer."