Along Eighth Avenue, there are several gay-friendly businesses, where rainbow flags hang all year long. In fact, it has the largest number of same-sex couples in New York. It has reigned supreme since it was founded by Bob the Drag Queen and Pixie years ago. Gay Bar offers a twist on the conventional memoir it’s a life seen in snapshots, the bars as the backdrop. Since the 1970s, Chelsea has been one of the most popular gay neighborhoods in NYC. It’s a high voltage, no-holds-barred explosion of choreo and brutal comedy. “Across the street from Industry-but alike in dignity-this slick two-level bar features my favorite show in the five boroughs: The Help with Kizha Carr and Pixie Aventura. This bar features fabulous queens every night, each with their own radically different style.” 3.
The wildest queens in the, well, industry perform numbers on a theme for some of the poshest gays in Hell’s Kitchen, and everyone has a blast. “Everyone who’s anyone goes to see Queen on Thursdays at this giant lounge. You can see rainbow flags on almost every street corner, and the number of gay. It has been home to drag legends like Jackie Beat, Sherry Vine, and Candice Cayne, and features amazing ladies like Tina Burner today.” 2. Greenwich Village is known as one of the most famous gayborhoods in the world. “A founding mother of drag in New York City, this bar was one of the first queer NYC venues to feature a drag show every night of the week, not just on weekends. One such well-known gathering place for young gay men, lesbians, and transgender people was the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village, a dark, seedy, crowded bar.