From Only Fans to Virtual Potlucks: How New York's LGBTQ+ Event Producers Are Weathering the Pandemic

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Billboard sat down with three LGBTQ+ event producers to discuss how they pivoted their work in the time of COVID to continue to provide for both their communities and themselves during a pandemic.

From the onset, New York was one of the states hit the hardest by the coronavirus pandemic. As such, Governor Andrew Cuomo was quick to ban large gatherings which brought all live events to a screeching halt. The decision made to slow the spread of COVID-19 also ceased LGBTQ+ safe spaces and parties throughout the state.

In the beginning, I was like, 'We need to do something so people can feel nurtured. They need to hear from us.' It's one thing for people to feel like they're in the middle of an ocean with everybody, but there's something very specific about this community that sometimes needs some extra love. Part of my job also is also to hold so much information, so much emotion. And I use that to inform the work that I do. So I have to pay attention to what's going on in the world so I can make it make sense for people to release.

season 12 viewings at Metropolitan in Brooklyn. I got back from Australia Monday and had two gigs on Thursday and Friday. Even the last show I did was kind of bizarre, people were on edge. I remember Lysoling the tip bucket and the stage and the mic. Then by that Sunday all the bars I worked at said they wouldn’t be open for a while. I was like, “Okay, we'll be closed for like a couple of weeks,” but I didn't know that it was going to be months.

Before quarantine, if you wanted to see drag, it was like an event. You would get dressed, you go out to the show. You were making a night of it, even if they were just going for one drink. Whereas now you're like in your own home and there's not much of a desire to watch drag from your phone while someone's performing in their bathroom or something. People got overwhelmed with the options.

Most of them are hosted in New York at Brooklyn. I did start hosting them throughout the country. That was going to be the next step. I was hoping to expand. I took Babetown on tour about a year ago and I have thrown Babetowns all over the country.

 

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