ISSUE 30
C E L E B R AT I N G
VOLUME 51
49 YEARS
F R I D AY
IN
J U LY 2 8 , 2 0 2 3
PRINT S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q I A + N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY S I N C E 19 74
SEATTLE’S SISTERS MAKE THEIR COMEBACK by Teddy MacQuarrie SGN Staff Writer It’s hard to miss them. Bedecked in colorful nun drag and with faces painted in white, the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence tend to make their presence known. Whether they’re out and about ministering to bar goers, running a fundraiser for Queer nonprofits, staffing the coat check, doing volunteer work, or offering blessings at Queer events and venues, the nuns are a conspicuous organization defined by their mission to “promulgate universal joy” and “expiate stigmatic guilt” (that is, guilt that is externally imposed).
see SISTERS page 7
Photo by Malixe
Capitol Hill Block Party marks 25 years with Queer artists Rebecca Black, MUNA
Arlington Pride stands tall despite protesting neighbors
Photo courtesy of Kylin Brown
by Kylin Brown SGN Contributing Writer This year marked 25 years for the music festival Capitol Hill Block Party in the Pike-Pine area, and despite several sports events, the Bite of Seattle, and Taylor Swift’s “Eras Tour” all coinciding last weekend, the festival proved its continuing success by packing Pike Street with dancing people all three nights.
Photo by Cameron Martinez
The event proved its place in the neighborhood and Seattle music scene by booking several well-known yet niche headliners, like Sofi Tukker, Denzel Curry, and Louis the Child, as well as emerging local talent such as Sea Lemon and The Kerrys, and providing a diverse array of food, drink, and wellness vendors to satisfy ticket-holders and fence-jumpers alike.
see CHBP page 11
by Cameron Martinez SGN Intern On Saturday, July 22, Arlington held its second annual Pride festival, “Camp Pride,” to the dismay of several citizens. The event, which took place at Legion Memorial Park in downtown Arlington, was designed to help the Queer youth of the city express themselves in ways they are not normally able to, but they were
still met by approximately 60 protestors. Camp Pride was the target of misinformation for a few months, but it really ramped up when in early July flyers were seen around the Gleneagle neighborhood indicating that drag queens groom children. This, of course, led to outrage among conservative Christians on social media.
see ARLINGTON page 10