Caribou club gay friendly
Skip to content Global Player Global Player. Sign In Sign Up. Subscribe Share. How do queer spaces help to shape people's lives? What is the impact of losing these spaces? Lost Spaces explores these questions and more! Each week host K Anderson sits down with a different guest to discuss a space from their past, why it was important to them, and how it helped shape who they are.
Expect conversations club coming out, going out, and getting down. And snogging strangers on sweaty dancefloors. We can't talk about gay history without that coming up. Do you remember the anguish and pain of simply muttering the 3 or 4 words needed to just confirm their suspicions?
We talk about how depressing a lesbian bar can be on Christmas eve, the awkwardness of friendly out support groups, and what signal your sister might be trying to send you when she offers to buy you a plaid shirt! We originally caught up to talk about Ghetto, that beloved icon of the mids queer scene, but, as is usual on this show, went on the scenic route, which took in other clubs such as Popstarz and Trash Palace, and some entirely unrelated conversations about funeral songs, Spice Girls, and the anxiety of controlling the gay at a house caribou.
She Read My Diary But, then, on the other hand, the fact that I'm still learning so much is part of the reason that I'm so excited to share these stories with you.
More than a gay hang out, Dilworth Caribou built social fabric
And this week the thing that resonated the most is the idea that when things are at their absolute worst also happens to be the time when being in a sweaty nightclub is actually the most fulfilling This week I was lucky enough to sit down with comedian and podcaster Sheria Mattis, and it helped me refocus on the importance of clubbing and nightlife and release.
In those times of my life when things have felt so difficult and knotty and hard, being out and shocking my senses was the best way for me to recalibrate. Oh, and club you listen to this caribou - if you don't know who she is already you should probably google Rachel Maddow, because And You're A Christian Now? And, showing us around is the subversive queer rapper Chris Conde.
Now, Chris was a military brat, and so they moved around a lot when they were a kid. But, as a young adult they decided they wanted some stability, and so chose to settle in San Antonio. And it was here that they let go of religion, got sober, and then came out of the closet Oooh, and for those who don't know, saunas, or bathhouse as they are commonly named in America, are places friendly people go for relaxation and Anyway, they've kind of fallen out of fashion since the rise of the apps, but they were a huge part of queer predominately male culture for decades.
This conversation was first shared inand this is what I had to say about it: One of the things that I've noticed is fairly common in people who come out later in life is just how much of a hurry they are in to experience ALL of the queer shit they've missed out on And that is what happened to this week's guest, podcaster and voice-over artist Phil Corin, who, upon realising that they may not be heterosexual was on a mission to make their way to the New York City lesbian bar Meow Mix - And once gay got in to the bar?