Gay sex club honolulu
People think they don’t know any gays, but they do - they just don’t know they’re gay.” We’re making our way in all levels of government and business. “When you see the numbers, you realize that gays are professional, managerial, entrepreneurial. “Even gays don’t realize the financial strength of their own community,” says Cheryl Embry, editor of the gay magazine Island Lifestyle. Since so few gay households (6.9 percent) support children, gays are a lucrative market, with plenty of discretionary income. More than 70 percent have college or graduate school degrees, and their average household income is $56,218. That’s 10.8 percent of the adult population - slightly greater than the national average of 9.6 percent.Īnd - says Vitale - Island gays are an affluent and well educated group. But Jeffrey Vitale, president of Overlooked Opinions Inc., a Chicago research firm that specializes in tracking the gay market, says his surveys show there are 97,441 men and women in the Islands who identify themselves as exclusively or almost exclusively gay. No one in the islands seems to have statistics on the local gay population.
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That power may be generated by sheer numbers. Island gays now have their own political action committee, their own magazine and newspaper, their own yellow pages, even their own churches, softball league and country dance association. “These days,” says Law, the attitude is we’re here and if you don’t like it, the hell with you. Partially because of AIDS and partially because large numbers of gays suddenly seemed to tire of the closet, that’s all changed radically. “Ten years ago, you couldn’t get anybody to attend meetings, couldn’t sustain a gay newspaper, couldn’t do anything.” “But that kind of tolerance made people apathetic,” he contends. In Law’s view, gays have always been tolerated here - as long as they were content to keep a low profile. “There have always been gays in the islands,” says Jack Law, who, as president of the company that owns Hula’s, Malia’s Cantina and Wave Waikiki, has spent 25 years immersed in the Honolulu gay scene. Gay life in Honolulu is out of the back alleys and into the political and social mainstream. The scene at Fusion fits many straight people’s image of the gay lifestyle: that it’s sordid, silly, and ought to be confined to some back alley somewhere. But bars like Fusion are no longer typical of the Island gay scene. Miss Beaver retakes the stage, and as smoke from a smoke machine billows around him/her, lip syncs to “Memories” from the score of Cats. Once he’s milked the room of its last dollar, he bestows a kiss on one of his benefactors, then grabs his clothes and leaves. He spends the next 15 minutes going from table to table, humping up against patrons while they tuck dollar bills in his briefs. But once he gets down to his green thong underwear, his body is all muscle. He’s finally forced to sit on the floor to take off his motorcycle boots. Lightning is a terrible dancer - and for that matter, not much of a stripper. The stage lights flash wildly, there are loud motorcycle sound effects and Miss Beaver introduces Mr.
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“Haven’t you ever seen a man in a woman’s dress before? We don’t bite - unless you ask us to.” Miss Beaver gives a free drink to the first patron to demonstrate he’s wearing no underwear, another to the first who can produce a condom. On the small stage is an emcee in drag who calls himself “Miss Fever Beaver.” “What’s the matter?” he asks at one point. At 11:30 on a Saturday night, about 40 or 50 people have made their way here, nearly all of them men and men dressed like women. It’s the kind of place that if you didn’t know where it was, you’d probably never find it. There’s only one small hard-to-read sign.
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THE BAR, CALLED FUSION WAIKIKI, IS LOCATED UP a dark staircase off a deserted Kuhio Avenue courtyard. The message? We’re here, so get used to us. Forced to organize by the AIDS crisis, the island Gay community is flexing