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Palm Springs Pride

Arizona LGBT safe schools advocate Caleb Laieski will be grand marshal of the Palm Springs Pride parade.

By Cait Brennan

Celebrating Pride

Palm Springs festival marks LGBT progress

With the theme "Justice Today, Equality Forever," the 25th anniversary celebration of Palm Springs Pride celebrates advancements in LGBT rights and looks to the future.

Ron deHarte, executive vice president of Palm Springs Pride, estimated that 70,000 people are expected to attend Pride events on Nov. 5 and 6. The celebration will feature a two-day stadium festival and an all-new block party and rainbow flag march.

Caleb Palm Springs Pride

Laieski in the 2011 Phoenix Pride Parade

The parade will honor one of Arizona's youngest and most accomplished LGBT leaders, Caleb Laieski, 16, of Surprise, who will serve as grand marshal. Laieski has been working on anti-bullying initiatives in Arizona and Washington, D.C.

"Caleb is doing great work helping to raise the consciousness of the system," deHarte said. "We see a 16-year-old activist who is moving mountains and we want to say ‘Great job and keep it up.' Our youth will be the ones to ensure the equal rights advancements in the next 25 years."

DeHarte said Pride's theme celebrates advancements like the repeal of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, the milestone decision by the Obama Administration to stop defending DOMA and an election that resulted in California's Legislature being more than 5 percent openly LGBT — the greatest percentage in any state in history.

"Progress comes slow, but we do see progress," deHarte said. "When you stand back and look at the 25 year span, you see real advancement for the LGBT community. Just this year, the Palm Springs City Council passed a resolution supporting marriage equality. New data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows the No. 1 city for same-sex couples in California — and perhaps the nation — is not San Francisco or even West Hollywood, it's Palm Springs."    -E

VITAL STATISTICS

Palm Springs Pride
Nov. 5 and 6
Tickets: $10 per day; parade and block party free
http://pspride.org

Event Details

Ultra Nate

  • The Pride festival, Nov. 5 and 6, will feature more than 30 performances during two days at the Palm Springs Stadium. The main stage will feature headliners Frenchie Davis, CeCe Peniston, house/dance star Ultra Naté, singer-songwriter Debby Holiday, former Pussycat Doll Kaya Jones and Tranzkontinental.

Kayla

  • The Arenas Road Block Party will be held for the first time on Nov. 5. Performers will include DJ Paul V. (Bootie LA) and DJ Dance Bitch and Billy Francesca, rapper Cazwell, BeBe Zahara Benet, Raja of RuPaul's Drag Race, singer-songwriter Simon Curtis and hip-hop legend Lady Tigra.
    Cazwell"We are trying to create a way to allow the entire community to come out and celebrate with friends," deHarte said. "The free downtown party is also a way of giving back to the community. Just the fun of thousands of people gathered on Arenas Road will be exciting. Add dancing and live entertainment and you really have the ingredients for a kick-ass night of fun."

Bebe Zahara Palm Springs Pride

  • The Pride Parade on Nov. 6 will feature four reviewing stands along the route and up to 125 parade contingents. "It makes for an exciting and unique celebration on Palm Canyon Drive with the Mount San Jacinto Mountains in the background — which, by the way, is truly the most scenic pride parade backdrop in the world," deHarte said.

Gilbert Baker

  • The March on Palm Canyon as part of the parade will feature a 500-foot rainbow flag carried by community and business leaders and students from gay/straight alliances and led by Gilbert Baker, creator of the rainbow flag.