logo
Towyn amusement park set to host family-friendly Pride event

Towyn amusement park set to host family-friendly Pride event

Rhyl Journal8 hours ago

Knightly's Fun Park, on Sandbank Road, will host 'Knightly's Pride 2025' on Saturday, June 28, in what has been billed as a 'spectacular free, family-friendly celebration in honour of the LGBTQ+ community'.
The event features character meet and greets, live music, family entertainment and an exclusive ride wristband deal.
It begins at 11am, and continues late into the night across Knightly's Fun Park venues, including Knightly's Bar and Knightly's Sandy Bay.
Event Highlights Include:
Character Meet & Greets:
Live Entertainment (from 1.30pm):
Knightly's Pride Street Party (4pm):
Evening Stage Performances (from 4.30pm):
Ride Deal – Pride Wristband Offer (6-10pm):
Knightly's Sandy Bay Family Party (from 6.30pm):
Knightly's Bar Late-Night Entertainment (from 8.30pm):
The event is being held during Pride Month, which is celebrated annually in June - the month when the 1969 Stonewall riots took place.
Similar annual events along the North Wales coast have taken place on Prestatyn's High Street, in Rhyl (at The Bodfor pub) and on Colwyn Bay's promenade.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I'm a queer Palestinian. Stop using my identity as cover for the destruction of Gaza
I'm a queer Palestinian. Stop using my identity as cover for the destruction of Gaza

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

I'm a queer Palestinian. Stop using my identity as cover for the destruction of Gaza

Pride has never been apolitical, but in recent years, particularly after the Israeli occupation's onslaught on the Gaza Strip after 7 October 2023, the coalition of queer rights in the west has felt increasingly fractured. In Berlin, the city I call home, Pride events have splintered along political lines as Palestine has been a recurring point of contention. According to organisers of Internationalist Queer Pride Berlin (IQP Berlin), a split between two major alternative Pride events followed an incident in which the initial organisers called police to the event after participants expressed solidarity by chanting 'free Palestine'. Meanwhile, at Berlin's official Pride parade, attenders have previously waved rainbow and Israeli flags as they marched through Berlin alongside an Israeli embassy float. At last year's IQP Berlin, the Palestine bloc was one of the largest. Jews and Arabs walked side-by-side, wrapped in Palestinian keffiyeh scarves, flanked by German police. The event faced police pushback, including officers in full riot gear wielding batons and shields. At least 25 people were detained, with the Palestine bloc being key targets for the police. Despite these displays of solidarity, and the risks of repression protesters have faced, there have been those who have sneered at the idea that queer people can find common cause with Palestine and advocate for liberation. The most popular example of this came last year when US pop star Chappell Roan criticised the Biden administration for its arming of the Israeli military. On stage at the Governor's Ball festival in New York, the singer, who is a lesbian with a drag persona, turned down an offer from the White House to perform for Pride month, saying: 'We want liberty, justice and freedom for all. When you do that, that's when I'll come.' Roan's show of solidarity drew the ire of talkshow host Bill Maher, who suggested the singer would be 'thrown off a roof in Gaza', invoking an oft-used cliche based on a video that has been debunked by Reuters and AFP, among others. He went on to make punchlines about Roan's career 'blowing up' like pagers in Lebanon, referring to Israeli attacks that killed 12 people and wounded thousands. Hundreds of children were killed in the following months in Lebanon, thousands in Gaza. Maher postured as the liberal hero of queer people, but it seemed easier for him, like many in the west, to point fingers at Palestinian society than to confront the systems his own countries support – systems that bomb, displace and isolate queer Palestinians in Gaza. When Benjamin Netanyahu addressed congress in July 2024, the Israeli prime minister said that pro-Palestine protesters holding up signs saying 'gays for Gaza' might as well call themselves 'chickens for KFC', suggesting our existence is mired in contradiction. That attempt to sever solidarity between queer people and Palestine has been deadly. A year earlier, an Israeli soldier held up a Pride flag in Gaza, with 'in the name of love' scrawled on it in English, Hebrew and Arabic. The state of Israel's official X account boasted of this achievement, 'the first ever pride flag raised in Gaza'. As a queer Palestinian, it is enraging to see my identity used as an instrument of war, but what I find most strange is the cognitive dissonance: for the 'love' of whom is this flag raised? Certainly not of the queer Palestinians living in Gaza, who have faced 19 months of terror, and a lifetime of occupation. In Jerusalem, the city where I was baptised, there is a very small organic scene of queer Palestinians. Some Palestinians from the city even visit Tel Aviv for Pride if they are allowed to travel there. Most are not. Queer Palestinians all face different obstacles based on where they live and how visible they are; their pain lives precariously in the crossfire of multiple struggles. One friend in Gaza told me he only wished to live in peace, away from conservatism, religious extremism and war. I later discovered he lost both of his parents and his brother, as well as cousins, in Israel's onslaught. Another friend from Jerusalem told me he had a message for the west: that freedom comes in many layers. 'We are under occupation and facing an ongoing genocide,' he said. 'So the first layer is simply to exist.' We can imagine and hope for a just, safe world for queer Palestinians to flourish in. Though there are some vibrant, if quieter, queer communities across the Middle East, there is still persecution. But if the goal is for queer Palestinians to live in an open, tolerant society, then they need first to survive Israel's aggression. There can be no Pride under occupation. There are Palestinian LGBTQ+ organisations such as alQaws and Alwan with aspirations to shape a Palestinian society based on tolerance, equality and openness. An ambition that is made so much harder, if not impossible, by occupation. You can't see rainbows from underneath the rubble. Equally, you cannot in good conscience celebrate Pride in the west while knowing that many of our countries are supplying the arms and funds that are killing queer Palestinians, along with their families. Despite attempts to position the struggles of queer rights as in opposition to Palestinian liberation, I have been moved to see queer people not fall for the trap. This Pride month, we will march again, surrounded by confetti and keffiyehs. Jad Salfiti is a British-Palestinian video producer and journalist

Towyn amusement park set to host family-friendly Pride event
Towyn amusement park set to host family-friendly Pride event

Rhyl Journal

time8 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Towyn amusement park set to host family-friendly Pride event

Knightly's Fun Park, on Sandbank Road, will host 'Knightly's Pride 2025' on Saturday, June 28, in what has been billed as a 'spectacular free, family-friendly celebration in honour of the LGBTQ+ community'. The event features character meet and greets, live music, family entertainment and an exclusive ride wristband deal. It begins at 11am, and continues late into the night across Knightly's Fun Park venues, including Knightly's Bar and Knightly's Sandy Bay. Event Highlights Include: Character Meet & Greets: Live Entertainment (from 1.30pm): Knightly's Pride Street Party (4pm): Evening Stage Performances (from 4.30pm): Ride Deal – Pride Wristband Offer (6-10pm): Knightly's Sandy Bay Family Party (from 6.30pm): Knightly's Bar Late-Night Entertainment (from 8.30pm): The event is being held during Pride Month, which is celebrated annually in June - the month when the 1969 Stonewall riots took place. Similar annual events along the North Wales coast have taken place on Prestatyn's High Street, in Rhyl (at The Bodfor pub) and on Colwyn Bay's promenade.

Cliché is close but no cigar in Commons gay banter
Cliché is close but no cigar in Commons gay banter

Times

time10 hours ago

  • Times

Cliché is close but no cigar in Commons gay banter

After the Supreme Court's trans ruling, many Pride events have banned political parties this year, so some MPs made do with a Monday night debate on the subject. Cue a bravura performance from the arts minister Sir Chris Bryant, below, who was in his element as he began: 'The Daily Mail once referred to me as an 'ex-gay vicar'. I am an ex-vicar, but the other stuff is coming along quite nicely.' He marked both progress made and the need for more, challenging stereotypes as he went. 'Not all gay men like musicals — I don't understand this, but I've met a few — and apparently not all lesbians enjoy tennis or smoke cigars,' he said. At which, the LGBT MP Rachel Taylor, an ex-line judge at Wimbledon, felt compelled to intervene. In a moment of pure Carry On Commons, she said: 'I would like to put on record that I have never enjoyed a cigar.' An at-first disappointing and then disconcerting sign appeared on Monday at parliament's Jubilee Cafe, which was spotted by Sidney Baginsky. It notified diners of an early closure for a Westminster Hall event, but then added 'we apologies for the incontinence this may cause' (sic). Better not ask what it is in the food that would normally prevent this. With innumerable challenges facing the nation, readers will be reassured to know that our representatives are keeping their eyes on the important things. Politico reports that MPs are obsessively sharing the new Westminster Spotlight League table — a measure of how often they are being mentioned in major publications. Reform are punching above their weight, with two MPs and an ex-MP in the top ten. Kemi Badenoch is the only Tory in that group, while the PM comes third behind Nigel Farage and the chancellor Rachel Reeves. A reminder that not all publicity is good publicity. Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick came 11th in that list, but he deserves a mention for his completion of the Three Peaks Challenge last weekend, in which he climbed Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike and Snowdon in 24 hours (he completed it with ten minutes to spare). Speaking to PopCon UK on Monday night, he said he was 'a little achy and had eaten a lot of Kendal mint cake'. He may be a climber, but will he get another chance to make a final assault on the summit of the Tory greasy pole? The novelist Tracy Chevalier doesn't often have the pleasure of her husband's company when she researches her novels, which, of late, have been set in places such as Dorset and suburban Washington. She told the Oldie literary lunch that, in a rare exception, he agreed to join her for a jaunt to Winchester, but it seems that Mr Chevalier is hard to please. As they left the ancient and beautiful English city, he said to her: 'Do you think you could set a book some place we actually want to go to?' Happy to report that all is well with the couple, and that Chevalier's latest book is set in Venice.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store