New orleans gay pride 2024


New Orleans Pride Run & Walk

NOLA Pride Run & Walk

Sunday June 29, 2025

Audubon Park, New Orleans

Come celebrate the 8th Anniversary of the New Orleans Pride Run & Walk. Lace-up for a day of pleasurable, community, and pride! Whether you sprint, jog, or stroll, arrive out and show your verb for a great cause. Proceeds will benefit the New Orleans PFLAG Scholarship Program, empowering education and fostering pride.

What’s in Store:

Largest Team Competition: Rally your friends, family, and colleagues to create the biggest and proudest team!
Great Sponsors: Thanks to our astounding sponsors, expect a day filled with surprises and support.
Fun Post-Race Party: Celebrate your achievement and dance to the beat of inclusivity with live music, nourishment, and festivities!

Perks for Participants:

Commemorative Race Shirt: A stylish way to remember the day and present off your pride all year round. Commemorative race shirts and sizes are not guaranteed for race day registrations.
Finisher Medal: Cross the finish line and claim your

OffBeat Magazine

The city is set to light up with color and community spirit this weekend as Pride celebrations take over Recent Orleans, bringing parades, performances, parties, and cultural events to neighborhoods across the city.

On Saturday, June 8, the heart of the action begins with PrideFest 2024 at Phoenix Bar, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., located at the corner of Rampart Street and Elysian Fields Avenue. Louisiana’s largest LGBTQ+ celebration will feature entertainment, vendors, food, and drink. It serves as the lead-in to the NOLA Pride Parade, which lines up at 5 p.m. and rolls at 6 p.m., winding through the French Quarter and ending on Bourbon Street between St. Ann and Dumaine streets.

Also on Saturday, Black Queer Community Fest will take place from 1 to 8 p.m. in Armstrong Park. Organized by New Orleans Inky Pride, the free event includes music, art, food, and dwell performances.

Saturday also includes cultural offerings like the Walking With the Gay Ghosts of New Orleans tour, a blend of queer history and folklore, with walks departing from Café Lafitte in

Welcome to Southern Decadence 2024

SDGMs XLVII Vanessa Carr Kennedy, Jeffrey Mayeaux and Paribe Meyer would favor to thank the following businesses and individuals for being Official Sponsors of the 2022 Southern Decadence Parade:

Presenting: Skyy Vodka, NOLA Hotel Group, Blush

Platinum: Hookers Ball, Golden Lantern, Crown Royal, Ambush, Hard Rock Cafe New Orleans

Gold: NOLA Living Reality, X-Crossing, Chef Ron’s Gumbo Stop, Bourbon Pub & Parade, Jennifer Solms & Cory Seaton, Allways Lounge & Cabaret, The Obituary, Bourbon Pride, SIPPs, Gulf Coast LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce, Swiss Navy, Courtyard Marriot, Up & Adam, Oz New Orleans, Phoenix, GrandPre’s, Rawhide, Good Friends Bar, Gennifer Flowers Kelsto Club, PowerMark Properties

Silver: Corner Pocket, Judy Peck

Bronze: Coldwell Banker Smith Homes

Pearl: Phantasmagorically-Hip, Jorge Yero, Nina Quinn, Miss Gay Lagniappe America

Southern Decadence to celebrate 52 years of LGBTQ pride in New Orleans

The annual Southern Decadence party began in the 1970s as a small, end-of-summer party between friends. But it’s since grown into one of the country’s largest LGBTQ celebrations with a showstopping parade the Sunday before Labor Day.

This year marks the event’s 52nd iteration. Organizers expect tens of thousands of tourists to flock to the many gay bars in the French Quarter and nearby neighborhoods beginning Thursday.

More than 250 events are advertised throughout the weekend on gaynola.com, the city’s central calendar for queer-friendly activities. Highlights include a performance by actor Billy Porter at Bourbon Pub, pop-up dance parties at the Joy Theater and The Fillmore and female-focused events Grrlspot and Her Haus.

Three volunteer grand marshals will oversee a huge parade through the French Quarter on Sunday starting at 2 p.m. They include local performers Vanessa Carr Kennedy, Jeffrey Mayeaux and Paribe Meyer.

More than 1,800 people are expected to march in this year’s procession