Gay pride in new york city

The New York City Pride Protest stepped off Sunday in Manhattan, celebrating the LGBTQ+ community and the history of the male lover rights movement. 

The annual march, expected to draw more than a million people, is the largest gay pride event in North America. It featured 60 floats and over 75, marchers.

"This parade is more than just a celebration of our Gay community, it is a symbol of our acceptance, it's a symbol of how our diversity in this city will always be protected," Mayor Eric Adams said Friday. "We will not allow any form of abhor to get in the way of that celebration."

This year's theme honors the march's origins and the Stonewall Riots that started it all. 

Here's everything to perceive about the start time, direction and street closures around the area.

Where is NYC Pride ? See the route map

The mile route traveled down Fifth Way from 26th Street to Eighth Street, then headed west on Eighth Street to Greenwich Avenue. 

It continued north on Greenwich Route for one block to Christopher Street, then west on Christopher Street to Seventh Avenue, where i

Pride March NYC: guide to the parade, street closures and best places to watch

New York City's substantial Pride celebrations have a deep and important history in the city. The first march was held in one year after the Stonewall Uprising, and the event has grown into an annual civil rights demonstration. Fast forward to , and a Pride march feels just as important and relevant as it did 55 years ago: Earlier this year, the government erased mention of trans people on the Stonewall National Monument's website. 

While many colloquially call the event the Pride Procession, organizers refer to it as The March as a nod to the event’s heritage. After all, the first march was once an unpermitted political protest against anti-LGBTQ+ policies and attitudes.

This year, activists and allies will take to the streets (and later NYC’s male lover bars) in support of global LGBTQ+ rights at the NYC Pride Pride on Sunday, June In recent years, The March has grown to include more than groups with millions of spectators.

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The grand finale of Pride Month was held Sunday in New York Town, starting with a march past the Stonewall Inn, the birthplace of the gay rights movement.

The march covered miles in Manhattan, and the sidewalks were jammed on a day that was all about happiness, love, and defiance.

Rise Up: Pride in Protest  

The theme for the pride this year was "Rise Up: Event in Protest." 

Among the estimated 1 million participants was storyteller and advocate Martin Boyce, who was 21 years elderly when he took part in the uprisings that lit a fire for the gay liberation movement.

"I'm a Stonewall veteran," Boyce said. "It means not letting yourself down, putting your event first. It's exhilarating because it's not dead. It's alive and it's growing. Stonewall gave us a history, a geography, a cause."

"Protest for those who are marginalized because when those who are marginalized possess access, we all benefit," said Kazz Alexander, NYC Self-acceptance co-chair.

After the protest, PrideFest buzzed with similar excitement into the evening. And while saw a drop In noticeable corporate sponsorship and corporat

Spectators, community members celebrate Modern York City Pride Parade in Manhattan

NEW YORK (WABC) -- More than a million spectators, community members and allies celebrated Sunday's Pride March in Fresh York City, which is considered one of the largest LGBTQIA+ demonstrations around the world.

Organized by Heritage of Pride, the event began as an annual demonstration commemorating the Stonewall Riots, and has since evolved into a global symbol of resilience, oneness and activism.

The festivities kicked off at 26th Highway and Fifth Avenue at noon.

ABC 7 New York is a proud sponsor of the event and broadcasted the event, with Eyewitness News' Sam Champion, Lauren Glassberg, Kemberly Richardson and Pedro Rivera anchoring live team coverage of the march.

The NYPD has increased security for the event, saying the map will be reinforced with 10, metal barriers along with sanitation trucks, police cars and uniformed officers.

There are no credible threats, but Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch says some procedures will be amplified because of the conflicts in the Middle East.