Slay Weekly May 25, 2026

Pride season is here, and queer Pittsburgh is stepping into summer together.

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Pride Season Has Officially Arrived

Okay. We can stop pretending Pride season is “coming soon” because it’s here.

You can feel it everywhere now. The group chats are impossible to follow, everyone suddenly has “just one quick thing” every single night this week, and queer Pittsburgh is visibly stepping into summer together.

This is the time of year when the city starts glowing. The parks fill up. The flyers multiply. The drag performers become impossible to schedule. And every queer person you know starts saying things like “Wait, what day is that event again?” while actively double-booking themselves.

Love to see it.

Because after long winters, difficult headlines, and months of surviving more than thriving, there’s something deeply healing about watching queer community come back outside together.

Not just for the giant Pride events still ahead but for all the smaller moments too, the picnics, the dance nights, the softball games, the community fundraisers, the rooftop hangs, the “you should come with us” invitations. That’s where summer really begins.

And maybe that’s the secret of Pride season. It’s not only a celebration. It’s a reunion.

So whether you’re entering June with a packed calendar or just hoping to reconnect with community a little more this year, know that there’s space for you in all of it.

Now go hydrate. Wear sunscreen. And prepare emotionally for the next six weeks of beautiful queer chaos.

SLAY OF THE WEEK: Dreams of Hope

This week’s Slay of the Week goes to Dreams of Hope, the queer youth arts organization that has spent more than two decades helping LGBTQ+ young people in Pittsburgh create, connect, heal, and imagine bigger futures together.

This is what sustaining a community looks like.

Not just Pride festivals and big stages but year-round spaces where queer and trans young people are told your voice matters, your creativity matters, your future matters.

Through theater, poetry, storytelling, mentorship, and intergenerational community building, Dreams of Hope has created a space where queer youth aren’t simply surviving, but actively shaping culture around them.

Dreams of Hope helps model what community can and should be like.

Read more on QBurgh →

READER JOY: Trae McCarthy

This week’s Reader Joy comes from Trae McCarthy, who shared:

“I am overjoyed to announce that I was just voted onto the Pittsburgh Pride Choir Board of Directors.”

We absolutely love seeing queer people stepping into leadership roles inside the very communities that helped shape them.

The Pittsburgh Pride Choir has long been one of those spaces where music, visibility, and chosen family come together, and it feels especially fitting to spotlight that kind of joy as Pride season ramps up.

Congratulations, Trae!

SHARE YOUR JOY

Did something gay and glorious happen this week?

✨ You wore your first binder out in public
✨ You finally asked them out (and they said yes)
✨ You slayed at karaoke
✨ You felt cute at Giant Eagle
✨ You just felt seen

We wanna hear it! Send us your queer joy, big or small, and we might feature it in next week’s issue. Because your joy? That’s newsworthy too.

Submit your joy here →

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QUEER JOY IN THE WORLD: Magic Hour Creative

At a film academy in Carrick, queer and trans young people are finding something a lot bigger than filmmaking skills. They’re finding space to become themselves.

At Magic Hour Creative, students are learning how to direct films, shoot interviews, make horror projects, and trust their own creative instincts in the process.

For a lot of queer young people, simply being encouraged to take up space creatively can feel revolutionary.

What makes Magic Hour especially beautiful is that it hasn’t become a queer gathering place through branding or marketing language. It happened naturally. Young queer and trans people found each other there. They built community there.

And together, they helped create the kind of environment so many of them wish they’d had earlier in life, a safe place to collaborate, imagine, and just exist comfortably.

That’s the thing about queer community spaces. Sometimes they begin with art and then slowly become refuge.

Read more on QBurgh.com →

And just like that… we’re basically at Pride.

You can feel the energy, the anticipation, the sudden realization that “next weekend” is somehow already June. Queer Pittsburgh is stepping fully into its season.

And what’s making this moment feel especially beautiful is that so much of this week’s issue reminds us where Pride really begins, in youth programs, in creative spaces, in community care, in people making room for each other to grow. That’s the heartbeat under all the glitter.

And speaking of glitter…

A huge congratulations to Kara Sells, who was crowned Mx P Town Pride last night at P Town Bar! Kara now joins the 2026 Drag Court of Pittsburgh with the court’s final member set to be chosen this Thursday at 5801’s Glitzburgh Pride Pageant. Pittsburgh drag is fully entering its main character era and we love that for all of us.

And now, for everyone already planning outfits and coordinating carpools, the 2026 Pittsburgh Pride Festival takes place Saturday, June 6 and Sunday, June 7 at Allegheny Commons Park West. The Pittsburgh Pride Parade steps off on Sunday, June 7 at noon.

It’s almost here, babes.

So between now and then, take care of yourselves, support the local things, show up for each other, and remember that every queer space we celebrate next month exists because people chose to build it together.

The countdown is officially on.

Talk soon.

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QBurgh is your source for LGBTQ news and community resources in Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania. Be sure to subscribe to our weekly newsletter and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Want to write for us?