photo
Kirk Newkirk, of Key Sailing, stands outside his boat and waverunner rental business on Pensacola Beach, Fla., while a Pride rainbow flag flies, behind, Thursday, May 24. This conservative stretch of the Florida Panhandle that twice sent George Bush to the White House and usually attracts family vacationers from the Deep South, is transformed each Memorial Day by more than 50,000 gay tourists who come for a three-day beach bash.
national
‘Redneck Riviera’ home to large gay Memorial Day bash
Florida panhandle town is more like Miami Beach on Memorial Day
Published Thursday, 31-May-2007 in issue 1014
PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla. (AP) – Souvenir shops that line this sugary white Panhandle beach display Confederate flag beach towels, window decals and T-shirts.
Hooters and other bars fly POW-MIA, Marine and Navy flags and cater to the sailors and Marines from the nearby base.
Vacationing Southern families usually fill the hotels and condominiums in this slice of paradise long nicknamed “The Redneck Riviera.” But every Memorial Day they mostly stay away as this Florida Panhandle town becomes more like trendy Miami Beach – 700 miles and a world away.
Starting in the mid 1980s, gay men from New Orleans and other nearby cities began gathering here for a three-day party that has grown into one of the South’s largest gay gatherings, attracting more than 60,000 people in 2004 before hurricanes Ivan and Dennis destroyed many beach roads and buildings.
While no one can recall any violent incidents targeting the gay tourists, the raucous weekend of concerts, Cirque de Soleil-like dance troupes and female impersonator RuPaul hasn’t always sat well with everyone – although that may be subsiding.
“We used to have groups that picketed but for the most part even that has gone away – there are just some religious groups that have a problem with it now,” said Jim Goldman, an organizer of the charity Art Against AIDS, which receives a portion of the proceeds of the events.
Kirk Newkirk, who rents kayaks, waverunners and pontoon boats on the beach, thinks the attitude among many locals about the weekend has evolved.
“Everybody has gotten much more liberal around here. Now the attitude is a lot more ‘Just take it as it goes,’” he said. “There has always been a gay community on Pensacola Beach, even back when I was a lifeguard out here in the 1960s. Somehow it just progressed into this huge party with thousands of people.”
But Gordon Godfrey, pastor of the 2,000-member Marcus Pointe Baptist Church, said many in his congregation are offended by the activities. Instead of flying rainbow flags to symbolize Pride, people should fly American flags on Memorial Day, Godfrey said.
“I think what goes on out there on the beach on Memorial Day is surprising to a lot of people who move into our community. I personally feel like it’s just inappropriate behavior from a biblical standpoint,” Godfrey said.
Jessie Jablonski, an Air Force retiree, and his wife, Trish, said they avoid the beach on Memorial Day weekend. “It’s just not my kind of crowd,” Jessie Jablonski said laughing, as the longtime Pensacola couple fished for flounder and snapper off a Pensacola Beach bridge one recent afternoon.
“Everybody knows that’s gay Pride weekend, and we don’t even come out this way because of the crowds,” said Trish Jablonski. She added her surprise that the event had flourished in the conservative area. “I’d say this is a pretty homophobic place.”
But University of West Florida sociologist Dallas Blanchard said the answer to the muted opposition is easy: the gays spend.
“You have the fundamentalist churches who always rant and rave against the [Memorial Day] event and there are always letters to editor complaining about it, but it has been tolerated because the money is green.”
E-mail

Send the story “‘Redneck Riviera’ home to large gay Memorial Day bash”

Recipient's e-mail: 
Your e-mail: 
Additional note: 
(optional) 
E-mail Story     Print Print Story     Share Bookmark & Share Story
Classifieds Place a Classified Ad Business Directory Real Estate
Contact Advertise About GLT