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TRAVEL: Sao Paulo Pride campaigns for a secular state in Brazil

Despite all the progress towards equality over the last few decades – we still face daily discrimination and prejudice – to combat this we have the tradition of Pride a mixture of protest, awareness and celebration.

I had the opportunity to see the 21st Sao Paulo Pride quite unexpectedly on Sunday, July 18, while I was visiting my partner in Sao Paulo. The Sao Paulo Pride parade is recognised as being the largest in the world.

Unlike Brighton Pride with its defined routes, organised park and street events, inclusive mixture in the Parade of large businesses and community groups and attendees of 300,000 or so  – Sao Paulo was so very different.

It was held in the main street of Sao Paulo (Avienda Paulista – which resembles a motorway) and featured just 15 floats, from large organisations and clubs with no room for walking groups or community organisations.

All the floats were huge custom-built trailers with the sole purpose of carrying the biggest and loudest sound systems they could, carrying the largest boom boxes you could imaging to entertain the 3,000,000 (yes million!) who watch the parade pass by. The music they produced was so loud my ears were still ringing one week later.

The entire eight lanes of Avienda Paulista were crammed shoulder to shoulder with revellers, from 10am and the parade only moved when it felt like it. As I was leaving the metro stations were rammed with thousands more arriving at 5pm in the evening.

Mike Nelson and partner

Fortunately it was mid winter in Brazil so the temperature was a comfortable 20 degrees centigrade – the prime spot to be dancing was over the air vents from the metro.

However, despite the air of fiesta there was a nervous undercurrent, as in the past the parade had been rocked by bombs. Thankfully this year, Sao Paulo Pride was incident free.

The parade took about 5 hours to complete the route, progressing like a train of very loud and colourful snails with a parallel stream of people dressed in colourful and outrageous costumes, walking and dancing besides it.

It finished in a local square where a top Brazilian DJ (their equivalent of Fatboy Slim) banged out current tunes till the early hours of the morning. However, most partygoers decamped to little squares and parks all over the city until 4am in the morning, when everyone was moved on by the police.

The focus of this year’s parade was the fight for a secular state (estado laico.)  The separation of church and state is particularly relevant at a time when right-wing religious leaders are rising to power at all levels in Brazilian politics.

The gay scene in Brazil is different to Brighton  – the main gay male image in Brazil is all about being a top, macho, muscle Mary, and the young Brazilian men furiously vied to out-macho each other.

Speaking to a few local people, in very bad Portuguese, they said they faced the same huge pressures to conform to social norms that we all do; but compounded by religious prejudice and with the added pressure to be bigger and more macho than the next person (sounds wonderful I hear you exclaim!).

Macho men were not alone on the parade – there were all variations of the LGBT+ Spectrum, along with every type of costume and group imaginable, from carnival costumes, drag, lots of swimming trunks and feather boas and balloons being quite the feature.

Oddly, although Brazil is a place where friends hold hands with each other, being too close and intimate or ‘obviously’ LGBT+ is noted and frowned upon (it’s quite a hard balancing act to present your acceptable side), so in reality, there are times when England remains more open and accepting to LGBT+ folk than the more glamorous South American destinations we all dream about visiting.

For more information about Sao Paulo, click here:

For more information about Gay night life: click here:

 

FOOD & DRINK: Revenge of the Burgers!

You can’t keep a good man down for long – it was only a matter of time before Barry Nelson would resurface again – he is back managing and cooking in a new Burger Bar upstairs at Bar Revenge called Burgershack.

The concept is simple, top quality burgers made on the premises from the highest quality beef, beautifully dressed and all cooked to order by Barry himself. You can even choose to have the burger in a pink bun (died in beetroot) for an extra 50p.

We tried the Club Tropicana, beef patty (chicken also available) garnished with a teriyaki and honey glaze, Monterey Jack, pineapple and salad, tastefully presented in a pink bun (£8) and the 2 Blue 4 U beef patty, served with Sussex blue cheese, smoked bacon, pickles and salad. Both burgers came with a dip, were top, top quality, delicious and highly recommended.

Add ons (£1 each) include bacon, Monterey Jack, Sussex blue cheese, jalapenos, pickles and guacamole.

Or try the spectacular loaded fries (£4) with a choice of cheese and spring onion (v), cheese bacon and spring onion, cheese, chilli, jalapenos and mustard OR french fries (£2.50), sweet potato fries (£3) or curly fries (£3).

Sides and dips include onion rings (£3), a delicious crunchy portion of coleslaw (£1) and sweet chilli/garlic mayo/BBQ dips (50p).

Burgershack is perfect for eating on the go, snacking before you go out for the evening and it will save a walk to the all night Market Diner or Buddies when you get the munchies after a night out clubbing at the weekend.

Burgershack is open Tuesday – Friday (5-9pm), Saturday & Sunday (noon-7pm) and Saturday Nights (midnight till Bar Revenge closes).

Place your orders at the downstairs bar and a server will bring you the food. If you eat during Bar Revenge happy hours, your drinks are served at happy hour prices!

Weekend Offer! During October, any burger on the menu+french fries+choice of a drink. (choose from house spirit plus mixer, pint of Fosters or a glass of house wine) costs an amazing £9.95 on Saturdays & Sundays (noon-7pm) and Saturday nights (midnight until they close).

You will find Burgershack at Bar Revenge, 5-7 Marine Parade, Brighton BN2 1TA

Sinitta and Sonia headline Southampton Pride today

The South Coast’s latest Pride gets underway in Southampton’s Guildhall Square at 11am this morning with an opening welcome from Cllr Satvir Kaur the Labour Cabinet Member for Communities, Culture and Leisure on Southampton City Council.

An action packed day of top entertainment follows including main stage appearances by 80’s Divas Sinitta at 12.20pm and Sonia at 4.15pm. Local favourite Lucinda Lashes takes to the main stage at 8.55pm and Southamptons Gay Men’s Chorus will appear on the separate Acoustic Stage at 5pm.

The Pride Parade starts from Guildhall Square at 2pm, progressing along Above Bar Street and High Street to the Bargate Monument and back to Guildhall Square.

There is a market hall in the 02 Guildhall Centre on Guildhall Square and later in the evening both The London Hotel and the Edge and Box Bar will have their own special parties going on all Saturday evening

Southampton Pride will be fundraising for Chrysalis an organisation catering for transitioning trans people and Breakout acharity that supports local LGBTQ young people.

For more information about Southampton Pride, click here:

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