Atlantic city gay clubs

What to carry out in Philly this week

Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated that the ByrdCage would be the first gender non-conforming bar in Atlantic City in 20 years. It will be the first full-service LGBTQ+ bar and restaurant in 20 years in the city. There have been multiple gay nightclubs, including the Rainbow Room and Prohibition Lock, that were expose over the past two decades. This story has been updated.

The ByrdCage, which will be Atlantic City's first full-service queer bar and restaurant in 20 years when it opens in promptly January, has been a longtime think of Jason Tell. While the name is a slight nod to the 1996 movie starring Robin Williams and Nathan Lane, the owner said it was a different movie that gave him inspiration. 

Tell said watching 2000 comedy "The Broken Hearts Club," which is centered around a group of male lover friends in a West Hollywood restaurant, made him long to start his own place appreciate that. Now he has at 3426 Atlantic Ave.


MORE:Brunch see Hawthornes will seal next month after 15 years in South Philly

The ByrdCage will feature a piano lounge and restauran

Out History

In 1979-80, Atlantic City was booming. Gambling had been approved a few years earlier and the capital was reinventing itself, big time. The grand old hotels from the 1920s were being renovated or torn down to build trademark new gaudy casinos. Not exactly appreciate those in neon-clad Las Vegas, but much more flashy compared to the art deco hotels from the Boardwalk Empire era. Neighborhoods were gentrifying, whole blocks were razed, little motels were now condos, and it was non-stop action everywhere you looked. I felt an immediate and deep connection with Atlantic City; we were both searching for, and building, a new persona for the planet.

My father worked in construction. He remodeled and updated the former summer homes and apartment buildings into year-round residences. I enrolled in Atlantic Metropolis High School and began learning my new life in this small but burgeoning seaside city.

One of the English teachers ran an “experimental” class. You had to implement to attend, and I was prosperous enough to find in. It wasn’t your traditional tall school class; it focused on creativity and discussion, and we explored themes and ideas. It was engaging and fun and one of the f

Jack Kenworthy( Queer Travel Expert )

Queer travel expert Jack Kenworthy turns 250+ city adventures into your guide for safe, vibrant, and inclusively fabulous global journeys.

Just two hours from New York Metropolis, you will find the exceptionally gay Atlantic City in Modern Jersey. Here you will locate many gay attractions, from bars and clubs too much more, making it a queer favorite tourist destination in America. In the 1950s, she was one of the gayest places, but by the 1970s, this scene had declined drastically.

Despite all these trials, the gay flame never went out entirely and is now showing a fresh fuel of life, with the scene growing rapidly as social clubs grow in numbers. Even if they still have a long way to go in cultivating any formally established queer venues, you can still honor pride and enjoy the brilliance of their city in many other ways.

Atlantic City doesn’t just have over seventy years of documented gay history, but an even longer one of entity the Summer tribal lands of the Lenape Native American tribe until the arrival of European settlers in the 17th and 18th centuries.  In 1783 Jeremiah Leeds decided the island would be perfect

Atlantic City plays to gays

For the first time in its 33-year history of legalized gambling, Atlantic Capital has a permanent queer nightclub in one of its casinos.

Prohibition opened its doors Thursday at the Resorts Casino Hotel, marking the city's strongest invite yet in a yearslong effort to attract one of the tourism industry's most sought-after demographic groups.

"It's long overdue for Atlantic City to have a club like this," said Joel Ballesteros, the casino's new director of marketing for the lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender communities. "It filled right up and people danced until 3 o'clock in the morning. With the rainbow flag flying outside and all the energy in here, it felt love a celebration."

Prohibition is housed in a 13th floor room that used to be a lounge for slots players. Its specify is a play on the casino's new roaring '20s theme, inspired by the HBO series "Boardwalk Empire" about Prohibition-era Atlantic City.

Friday afternoon, a not many hours before the club would open for the night, the colored lights were flashing, four gigantic palm trees scraped the ceiling and Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" played on a massive video screen.

"I think it's going to work," said G