Culture He’s throwing WorldPride in Trump’s backyard. Who’s with him? - Ryan Bos is trying to pull off a huge, global LGBTQ+ event in Washington during a time when not everybody is feeling comfortable showing their colors.

He’s throwing WorldPride in Trump’s backyard. Who’s with him?
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Jesús Rodríguez
2025-05-27 16:14:01GMT

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Ryan Bos, executive director of the Capital Pride Alliance, is hoping for a successful WorldPride in Washington, even if the political environment is fraught. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)

Ryan Bos has a huge party to pull off — or several parties, spanning weeks and involving road closures all over Washington, more than a hundred contracts, 25,200 reusable drink cups, a 1,000-foot-long rainbow flag and Shakira.

Bos is the executive director of Capital Pride Alliance, which this year is in charge of planning and executing the festivities around WorldPride, which runs through early June. It’s a huge feat of logistics, and that’s before you consider the politics: This year, the LGBTQ+ celebration is being held in the backyard of a government that has targeted transgender rights and made major cuts to HIV prevention programs. At the Kennedy Center, President Donald Trump has promised “NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA”; the alliance relocated some events from the arts institution to other venues “to ensure our entire LGBTQ+ community will be welcome.” Some corporate allies have withdrawn their financial support or asked not to be explicitly associated with the celebration.

The party is still very much on. But it’s not clear how many people, welcome or not, will ultimately decide to take part.

On a rainy Tuesday in mid-May, Bos sat, arms folded, in a glass-paned conference room on the second floor of an office building in Logan Circle, tapping his brown dress shoes and hearing from his team. “The ‘Queer Eye’ guys are out,” a staffer said at one point. “They were not able to line up their schedules.” Maps denoting public restrooms needed printing. Someone had to inform the celebrities that their private security couldn’t carry weapons in Washington. And, no, they wouldn’t be getting rain insurance.

Then there was this:

“All of the existing parade signage that we have that says ‘presented by Marriott International’ or ‘Marriott Bonvoy’ is not usable,” another staffer informed the group, “because Marriott, although not taking their sponsorship down and still wanting to use the Bonvoy logo, no longer wants to have it say ‘presented by’ — at least in this climate.” (Marriott did not respond to The Washington Post’s requests for comment.)

The June 7 parade — a hallmark of every Pride — was less than a month away.

“So,” the staffer added, “that leads us to the questions of which signs we need to reprint and redo.”

Bos is throwing a parade; corporate America is walking a tightrope. In February, the consulting giant Booz Allen Hamilton, which has millions in contracts with the federal government, canceled its sponsorship of the celebration. Deloitte, Comcast and Darcars chose not to donate as they had in years past, Bos said. (Booz Allen told Politico that its withdrawal from the event doesn’t mean “any pullback of support to this community.” Its media department did not reply to emails from The Post last week. Deloitte and Comcast also did not respond to emails from The Post. Darcars declined to comment.)

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Workers erect a rainbow flag at the U.S. Treasury Department before Pride Month in 2024. (Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images)

Bos says the organizers expect to get about $6 million in corporate money, about half of what they’d hoped for.

A handful of other corporate sponsors are still contributing, Bos said, but covertly. As in, they don’t want to be named or have their logos displayed.

“It’s somewhat counter to Pride,” Bos said in his office after the staff meeting. “You know, we appreciate their financial contribution. Pride is about standing up and affirming and being visible.”

He hadn’t seemed fazed by the news about the Marriott signage. At least the hotel franchise hadn’t pulled its funding. And it is still listed on the WorldPride website as a “Proud Presidential” partner — its biggest corporate sponsor.

“My concern,” Bos added later, “are those that, in essence, have gone in the closet.”

There’s still enough money in the coffers for the organizers to have put together a full program with some big draws. Among the marquee events is a concert by Shakira on May 31 at Nationals Park, preceded by 30 minutes of programming about Pride. On June 6, Jennifer Lopez is set to take the stage at RFK Stadium for a ticketed music festival; Troye Sivan will do the same on June 7. The rainbow-festooned parade floats will wend their way down 14th Street toward the Capitol starting at 2 p.m. that day, and a Doechii concert on Pennsylvania Avenue will follow on June 8. Bos said he didn’t know yet whether uniformed police officers would be marching in the parade — a subject of contention at other Pride festivals in recent years — but he said it would be part of the discussion with law enforcement, adding that, as a community, “I think we have to keep an open mind about this conversation.”

Celebrations planned by certain subcommunities are already underway, including trans pride, Latinx pride, Black pride, API pride for Asians and Pacific Islanders, “silver pride” for older people, and (a new addition) military pride. Other events include a human rights conference and a protest rally.

But some queer people may not have much of a desire to make themselves visible here, now. In October, the D.C. mayor’s office said it expected up to 3 million visitors. In March, a Capital Pride Alliance official estimated that 1.5 million would come. Earlier this month, Bos said he has “no clue” how many people to expect. “I’m hopeful that we’re still going to surpass the million mark,” he said. The alliance purchased hotel blocks, but, as of last week, “the hotel bookings aren’t where we expected them to be,” Bos said.

Nat Wallace, board member of the Toronto Purple Fins Gender Free Swim Club, was planning a trip for about a dozen of his club members to participate in an LGBTQ aquatics championship that coincided with WorldPride. But after the inauguration, Wallace and his teammates grew worried that some people could be detained at the border or turned away if their documents didn’t match their gender identity. Although the U.S. government says that a visitor’s gender and beliefs about sexuality don’t render them inadmissible, Wallace, who’s trans, was skeptical. The team ultimately decided to skip the competition — and ditch the rest of the celebration, too. “It’s a concern — whether or not WorldPride as an organization can really consider the [United] States as a country that’s safe to host these events,” he says.

The Human Rights Campaign has fielded hundreds of questions from prospective visitors, said Brandon Wolf, the organization’s national press secretary. Wolf, a survivor of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting, was at a fundraising dinner in South Florida a couple of months ago, where guests asked him about where to party but also about how to stay safe if they went to pro-LGBTQ+ demonstrations in Washington. Wolf says that he has reassured people that organizers are working closely with local D.C. police, “which, as we know, is different than federal agents,” but also that “you’ve got to look at your own circumstance.”

Beyond the Beltway, in states where local governments are also enacting policies targeting LGBTQ+ people, “the vibe is a turn-towards-my-nearest-neighbor type of care,” says Zooey Zephyr, a Democratic state legislator in Montana. She has heard about LGBTQ+ groups in Montana organizing Pride events there, or working with local clinics to make sure LGBTQ+ people have health care, but not as much about WorldPride. “I don’t think that will be the primary driver for our community.” (Zephyr might attend the WorldPride rally, but she will otherwise be preoccupied with a fellowship at Harvard.)

So will this still be fun? “I think we make everything fun,” Wolf says. “That’s just who we are, right?”

Bos says he understands that people need to evaluate their own risks when deciding to attend WorldPride, but “this is not the time to retreat.”

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“This is not the time to retreat,” Bos says. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)

He has been making events work, or trying to, for much of his life. When Bos was growing up in Indiana, his parents helped plan a big “ethnic music festival” every year, and he and his brother volunteered to help out. (“It was an Oktoberfest,” he says.) He moved to the Baltimore area after college to work in education, and, years later, got involved with efforts to bring the Gay Games — an international sporting competition — to Washington, but those efforts ultimately failed. “A lot of the undertone there was this misperception of D.C.,” Bos says, “just not realizing we’re more than the federal city, we’re more than the Mall, or more than the Capitol, the White House.”

In 2021, InterPride — the global umbrella group of Pride organizers — first awarded the 2025 host designation to Taiwan, but that reportedly fell apart over a different kind of political tension: how to refer to the place where it was being held. Washington had been the runner-up, and the Capital Pride Alliance leaped at the chance to prove it could pull it off.

Bos and his colleagues argued that D.C. knew how to put on big events and that it was more than a seat of government, even as they acknowledged the 2024 election might affect the atmosphere. “It was clear that, even then, they knew that the election could go either way,” Bos said. “There was a sense of importance of how having WorldPride in the United States of America, in its nation’s capital — sort of that message that it could send.”

When the election went Trump’s way, Bos went into a state of denial and fear. “I couldn’t watch news for probably four to five months,” he said. After the inauguration, the executive orders — on transgender people, on DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) — felt like “gut punch after gut punch.”

Showing up at Pride matters more this year, Bos said, to show LGBTQ+ people who are not out that “there are people fighting, especially when you see these corporations all retreating their support. For me, it feels like things are just crumbling around — like, the room, the walls are caving in on you.”
 
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Why isn't the flag pole planted in Washington?

Everything to know if you’re attending WorldPride 2025 in D.C.
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Fritz Hahn
2025-05-27 19:47:55GMT
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(Illustrations by Genie Espinosa/The Washington Post)

The largest LGBTQ+ festival in the world is making its way to Washington this week. The streets of the nation’s capital will be filled with pageantry, parties and protests, and crowds will pack theaters and museums, nightclubs and concerts, and a conference on human rights. It’s lost on no one that WorldPride is celebrated at a time when the rights of LGBTQ+ Americans are under attack by an administration headquartered blocks away from some of its biggest events.

If you’re attending any WorldPride events between now and June 8, here’s what you need to know. We also have guides to D.C.’s essential LGBTQ+ bars and restaurants, as well as recommended events for every day of the festival.

What is WorldPride?​

WorldPride is an international celebration of LGBTQ+ identity that traverses the globe and is usually held in a different city every two years. The first was held in Rome in 2000. Sydney hosted the last WorldPride, in 2023. The next event will be in Amsterdam in 2026, and Cape Town, South Africa, will become the first African WorldPride host in 2028.

If you’ve attended past Pride celebrations in Washington — the buoyant parade, street festival, concerts and late-night dance parties — you might think you know what a Pride festival can be. But WorldPride is on a different scale, featuring countless events that stretch over weeks and attract visitors from around the globe. Before the pandemic, the Capital Pride Alliance estimated that 550,000 people attended Washington’s annual parade and associated celebrations throughout the weekend. By comparison, when organizers announced the plans for D.C.’s WorldPride, they said they were expecting up to 3 million visitors. (That prediction has since been lowered significantly in the wake of dramatic political shifts in the nation’s capital.)

WorldPride has been held in the United States once before, in New York City in 2019 to honor the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising. Organizers say more than 5 million people attended, and the parade took 12 hours to finish.

Why is WorldPride being celebrated in D.C.?​

WorldPride is controlled by an nonprofit association called InterPride, which represents Pride organizations in more than 70 countries. The WorldPride festivals are awarded in a similar manner to the Olympics, with cities bidding against one another for the right to host the event. In 2021, only two cities submitted bids to host the 2025 WorldPride: D.C. and Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Taiwan won. The following year, the Taiwanese organizing committee withdrew its bid after a dispute with InterPride over the name of the festival. (Traditionally, WorldPride festivals are named after the city, such as WorldPride London or WorldPride Toronto, while organizers in Taiwan wanted to use their country name instead of Kaohsiung.) After Taiwan pulled out, InterPride awarded the festival to D.C.

D.C.’s original pitch to InterPride focused on celebrating the 50th anniversary of Gay Pride Day, a block party that was the city’s first official Pride celebration. The festival’s self-described pillars include the city’s importance as an center of the struggles for human rights and its role as a political and cultural capital. And, lest we forget, it’s also “the gayest city in America.”

How is WorldPride different from D.C.’s annual Capital Pride festival?​

If you’ve been to Capital Pride at any point over the past decade-plus (barring the pandemic years), you know the schedule by heart: welcome parties Friday night; the big parade through Dupont Circle on Saturday, followed by “official” dance parties; a street festival and concert on Pennsylvania Avenue on Sunday. Pride may begin earlier and have events a few days later, but there are three days that are on everyone’s calendar.

This year, it’s different: Almost a week before those signature events, there’s a welcome party at Nationals Park with Shakira, and the schedule just builds from there: performances at a dozen theaters, exhibits and talks at museums, a music festival in partnership with the producers of the annual Project Glow, multiple film festivals, a six-day sports festival with everything from volleyball to kickball to roller derby, concerts and drag shows filling the city’s top clubs, dozens of other “official” WorldPride events, plus other events taking place at LGBTQ+ bars and venues around the area.

When is WorldPride?​

Officially, WorldPride began May 17 and runs through June 8. The early start is a nod to events like D.C.’s Trans Pride, which usually happens in mid-May, and Black Pride, held over Memorial Day weekend. But the official welcome ceremony and concert take place at Nationals Park two weeks later, on May 31, with the official closing party at the festival on Pennsylvania Avenue NW on June 8.

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What are the major events of WorldPride?​

Between opening with Shakira at Nationals Park and ending with Doechii at the official closing party on Pennsylvania Avenue, there are dozens of events happening: a choral festival, a two-day outdoor dance party, guided walking tours, party cruises, a human rights conference, late-night dancing, tributes to community elders, and fun for all ages. The pinnacle events that encapsulate the spirit of Pride happen the weekend of June 7 and 8.

That Saturday is the WorldPride Parade, which features more than 300 contingents with floats, decorated vehicles and marching groups heading down 14th Street NW beginning at noon. The route takes them from T Street to Freedom Plaza, before turning on Pennsylvania Avenue and ending at the street festival — a two-day block party with hundreds of vendors and exhibitors, live performances, a beer garden, and other attractions. On Saturday, “Wicked” star Cynthia Erivo headlines the post-parade concert.

Sunday starts with an international rally and march, which includes speeches at the Lincoln Memorial before marching toward the Capitol. Participants will wind up at the street festival, where Doechii performs at WorldPride’s closing ceremony and concert.

Where’s the best place to watch the WorldPride Parade?​

The 2024 Capital Pride Parade debuted a new route traveling straight down 14th Street NW as a test run for WorldPride’s parade. Besides wider streets, the other upgrade is that the parade passes numerous sidewalk cafes and parks on its way to the street festival. Last year, crowds packed into streeteries outside Chicken and Whiskey, Le Diplomate, Pappe and other restaurants in the stretch between P and S streets. Cork Wine Bar, near the starting line, sold canned wine and popcorn through its windows to the crowds on the sidewalk.

Just be warned that some restaurants, like Le Dip, sell streetside reservations for $300 to $600 per table. The Hamilton Hotel, at 14th and K streets, offers reserved seating at a patio party hosted by “Drag Race” winner Symone, featuring DJs and cocktails; tickets are $60.

The concentration of bars makes 14th Street north of Thomas Circle the liveliest and most crowded section of the route. By contrast, crowds were much more manageable on Pennsylvania Avenue near the Old Post Office Tower and Federal Triangle.

Those who don’t want to stand for hours while the parade passes can pay for seats with a view; WorldPride has two locations with shaded seating. Grandstand bleachers in Freedom Plaza at 14th and Pennsylvania are $40. VIP viewing in Franklin Park includes food and drinks as well as seats for $70, plus plenty of room for kids (or adults!) to stretch their legs.

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What celebrities are in town for WorldPride?​

There are probably more “RuPaul’s Drag Race” alumni in D.C. than anywhere else in the world during Pride. Maybe that’s an exaggeration, but only a little — even RuPaul will be here, DJing during the Global Dance Party on June 7. The winners of the most recent season are appearing together at 9:30 Club’s “Season 17 Extravaganza” on June 8, but you’ll be able to find former contestants all over town, from Pitchers to the Howard Theatre to brunch at the Four Seasons. (See our list of suggested events for more ideas and details.)

But even more celebrities are visiting Washington this week: Award-winning actor Laverne Cox and singer and actor Reneé Rapp (of “Mean Girls” fame) have been named grand marshals of the parade. Shakira, Erivo, Doechii, Troye Sivan and Jennifer Lopez are among the artists performing at official WorldPride events. Janelle Monáe and Perfume Genius have concerts scheduled. You never know who you might bump into getting coffee and orange blossom croissants at Yellow.

How are D.C. museums celebrating WorldPride?​

The biggest exhibition coinciding with WorldPride is “LGBTJews in the Federal City” at the Capital Jewish Museum, which tells the story of Jewish political and cultural life in the LGBTQ+ community, from trailblazing activist Frank Kameny to local drag star Ester Goldberg. During Capital Pride, the museum hosts a Community Day with free entry to the galleries on June 4 and an after-hours cocktail party on July 24.

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art had planned to open “Here: Pride and Belonging in African Art” in late May, but the exhibition has been postponed until “early winter 2026,” a spokesperson told The Post, due to “our current budgetary situation.”

The WorldPride Welcome Center, located in Chinatown, has a display of fabric art, including site-specific installations and panels from the AIDS Memorial Quilt. An additional 45 panels from the quilt are on view at St. Thomas’ Parish Episcopal Church in Dupont Circle in remembrance of members of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington.

Instead of exhibitions, museums are hosting panels and events. South African artist Zanele Muholi joins writer and professor Mecca Jamilah Sullivan at the National Museum of Women in the Arts on May 28 to discuss topics including “the representation of the Black queer body in contemporary diasporic art and literature.”

The Smithsonian American Art Museum’s annual Pride Family Festival takes place on May 31, with live performances, crafting and scavenger hunts in the galleries. The National Museum of American History is showing off some rare and rarely seen artifacts from its collection during LGBTQ Objects Out of Storage on the afternoon of June 4.


There are two after-hours events June 5: The Phillips Collection’s Pride-themed Phillips After 5 features talks about LGBTQ+ artists in its collection, style workshops and drag performances. Over on Capitol Hill, the Library of Congress’s Live! at the Library welcomes author Thomas Mallon, whose latest book is a collection of diaries he wrote for the New Yorker in the early years of the AIDS crisis.

What are local bars and restaurants doing for WorldPride?​

They’re going to be busy. If you’ve been to Pride in a normal year, you know to expect long lines outside bars and nightclubs after the parade, or street festival, or block party. They’re probably going to be even longer this year. Kiki is selling cut-the-line “Kiki Express” passes valid through most of WorldPride for the U Street bar and its “Pink Pony Pop-Up” down the block, for $100 ($125 if you’re paying with a credit card). Pay attention to calendars: Crush on 14th Street isn’t charging a cover charge for most of the festival — it doesn’t have one most of the year — but it will cost $25 to enter after 7 p.m. on the final Friday and Saturday night of Pride. The problem is a matter of supply and demand: D.C.’s LGBTQ+ bars tend to have limited capacity, which is why most big events are taking place at venues like 9:30 Club or the Howard Theatre.

Finally, keep an eye on your favorite bars’ social media accounts for updates — just in case they announce on the final day of Pride that a special guest is performing at 12:30 a.m.

Were WorldPride events canceled by the administration?​

John Bucchino’s choral piece “A Peacock Among Pigeons” was set to be the centerpiece of a WorldPride performance with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center, but Bucchino told The Post that the show was “postponed” indefinitely after President Donald Trump’s takeover of the center. (Jean Davidson, executive director of the National Symphony Orchestra, said the change was “due to financial and scheduling factors.”) Instead, “A Peacock Among Pigeons” will be performed at multiple locations during the festival, including St. Thomas’ Parish (June 1) and National City Christian Church (June 4). Other events that had been scheduled as part of the Kennedy Center’s Tapestry of Pride program, including drag story times and a display of sections of the AIDS Memorial Quilt, were moved to the WorldPride Welcome Center. WorldPride organizers say the events were not canceled by the Kennedy Center but relocated “to ensure our entire LGBTQ+ community will be welcome.”

How is WorldPride keeping participants and visitors safe?​

“I think folks will notice a higher level of security at all of our events,” says Sahand Miraminy, the Capital Pride Alliance’s director of operations. “We’re working really hard to balance security and safety with also celebrating the events, and keeping them looking like the celebrations that they deserve.” There will be screening for weapons at the entrance to the street festival, which will be fenced in. Miraminy says the fencing will help control access but also allow vendors at the two-day festival to leave their booths in place overnight.

Miraminy says years of experience coordinating the Capital Pride festival means that organizers have good relationships with agencies in D.C., such as the Metropolitan Police and its LGBTQ+ liaison unit, the National Park Police, and the D.C. Homeland Security and Emergency Management Agency. “In addition to the agency support that we have, we also hire private security and have many forms of safety measures and surveillance that we may not share at all times with the public, but there are certainly conversations that we’re having with those agencies on a weekly basis,” Miraminy says. “I think one of the challenges that any event planner has when they’re planning large-scale public events is acknowledging that keeping people safe is our biggest priority, but how people feel safe is also really important, and that looks different for everyone. I think we will try really hard to balance that, and to make people feel welcome at these events.”
 
crying about how hard it is to act like a gross homo on the streets of the capital due to "fear" caused by trump's executive orders for shit like banning men from participating in womens sports is certainly not reducing faggot fatigue.

Has anyone actually not been allowed entry to the US because they were dressed in drag in customs? The optics of a bunch of beltway lanyard buttfuckers dancing around to celebrate being degenerates seems especially out of touch right now in the current political climate. the economy sucks and people have real things to worry about. Ask the average libtard what they are pissed about and its illegals getting booted and palestine- they aren't juiced up about protesting tranny passport pronoun shit.
 
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