Gay bar reading pa

Woody’s

The Experience

Woody&#;s is a five-part nightlife experience.

The airy pub bar at the entrance is dwelling to plus beers on tap and, before 10 p.m., a handful of light bites free to order (think: wings, tenders and tots). Above the bar, big screens show anything from music videos to sports games.

Upstairs, the main dance floor bursts to experience each weekend with entertainment, dance remixes and electrifying beam effects.

For a more intimate experience, The Suite, Woody&#;s Hollywood glitz-and-glamour-inspired dance lounge, spins hip-hop, Latin and pop tracks and is a prime spot for private events.

Rosewood, Woody&#;s chic Art Deco-inspired cocktail lounge (accessible via an outdoor secret passage), regularly features creative handcrafted concoctions and dwell DJs.

And Glöbar, adjacent to the main building on 13th & Walnut Streets, serves as Woody&#;s newest dance party lounge, slinging cocktails and Top 40 remixes all blackout long.

For more facts, including hours and upcoming events, click the button below.

Visit Official Website



Reading Gay Bars

Reading is a large town in the county of Berkshire. It has one gay-popular venue. Reading has a major university, it's well established for Reading Festival and it has numerous historic attractions.

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Tomorrow: Karaoke - Every Thursday
Audience Rating

Based on 12 votes

Although not an exclusively gay venue, The Blagrave Arms is a gay-popular bar in Reading. There are no other gay bars in town. You can have a meal here and a civilised drink or you can pull a tardy one and party.

There's a karaoke night on Thursday. It stays expose later over weekends.

This is the place to come for a homosexual night out in Reading.
Features:
Audience Rating

Based on 12 votes

Weekday: Mon-Weds: Thurs:

Weekend: Fri-Sat: Sun:

Last updated on: 3 Nov

Last updated on: 3-Nov

The LGBT Center of Greater Reading creates, administers, and provides services, advocacy, and support to the Greater Reading LGBTQ+ community, including our allies, with the objective that all may live a life of fulfillment, inclusion, and celebration.

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Artist Inhwan Oh has memorialized Philly’s rich history of queer bars in an installation that highlights their importance as well as their fleeting ephemerality.

Titled “Where He Meets Him in Philadelphia,” the site-specific function is part of the featured exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, “The Shape of Time: Korean Art after “

It features the names of 36 queer bars and clubs that have existed in the city (find a partial list below). The names are layered atop one another on the floor in powder incense. They were also burned according to centuries-old rituals and meditative practices, though due to flame hazard restrictions, that activity is displayed on a small monitor beside the piece.

“I focus on the relationship between my perform and the audience,” Oh, who is based in Seoul, told Billy Penn. “I hope that through my work they can sense and think of the history, memories, emotions, and sensations of the gay community.”

For Bob Skiba, curator at the Williams Way LGBT Community Center and author of the Gayborhood Guru blog, the burning process spotlights the short-lived ex