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June 28th, 2006 Byron Beck | Queer Window
 

Southern Comfort

At home in the Paris of the South: Little Rock, Ark.

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I'm ready to move from Portland, Ore., to Little Rock, Ark.

Yeah, I said it. And why wouldn't I? Now this isn't due to some spectacular queer scene (more on that later), the scent (just like fried chicken) or the way the sun sets there (amber waves of wow). No, for me, it goes deeper: I want to move to Little Rock because it still has the thing I fear that gays on the front lines of Portland's queerest issues are beginning to lose: hope.

Just last week I traveled to Little Rock, population 183,000 (about one-third Portland's size), for a convention of alternative newsweeklies. I'd dreaded going to this Southern "red state" that, truthfully, I'd never given a rat's ass about. I knew next to nothing about Arkansas' state capital, except that Bill Clinton had built a museum there that looked like a double-wide trailer.

Now, there were ample examples of the Southern discomfort I expected to encounter: "Raise the Praise" tourists raiding the one and only gift shop; Juneteenth teens in hoochie tops and baggy drawers shutting down the streets; an amendment, like Oregon's, that bans gay marriage. But I was surprised by what else I found—gay people who actually like living in Little Rock.

Take Jeffrey. He is like a Portlander in many ways. He works in a bookstore next to a coffeeshop. He and his partner, an organist for one of the city's mega-churches, had moved here from Sedona, Ariz. Not the type to go out to bars, they still have plenty of queer friends. What makes him different from "us" is his sanguine attitude about the place he now calls home. "Little Rock runs at a different speed," said the crisply dressed gent, the antithesis of the protoypical radical Port-queer. "Things are a lot slower here. It's just the way things are."

Jeffrey's words touched me in a weird way. The same thing happened when I went to a gay bar near the Peabody Hotel (the host hotel with those "world-famous" ducks). No, nobody "touched" me, but I was moved in another way. It was by the laid-back integration of cultures: black-white, gay-straight, young-old, all together on a late Friday night. It was this weird alt. universe where everyone got along (and knew the steps to hip-hop line dances).

I now believe you haven't really lived until you've set foot in a queer bar in Arkansas.

It shouldn't have come as a surprise that my feelings were translated into words by the "man from Hope": The convention's keynote speaker, Clinton looked handsome, if worn out. Maybe it was from all the talking—the ex-president talked for over an hour from just two pages of notes. Most of what he talked about—Darfur, energy consumption—buzzed right over my head. But what did stick with me was when he talked about making friends with his enemies. "We need to find ways to unify this country," Clinton said. Another speaker at the convention, Laura Dell, echoed that idea when she said we all need to "integrate, not separate" the way we look at things. I saw prime examples of this style of respecting your fellow man, gay or not, all over Little Rock. I don't see that much in the pressure cooker that is Portland—especially in these queer-marriage-debate times.

In a sea of red, I found an island of blue that helped me realize I need to judge a city less by its accent and its differences, and more by the character of its people. Then I might actually find hope again. Rock on, Little Rock, and thanks for your hospitality.

 
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06.29.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Southern ComfortInteresting. I too (along with my queer friends who call Portland home) have long thought that Little Rock was nothing more than a small, red neck town that caters solely to your run of the mill Americans. I always thought it was too "south" for me, and never acknowledged that Little Rock may actually have something to offer. We converse alot about a place in the states that we can go be oursleves and integrate with others who are happy with life, and do not demand the intense, flair nature of Portland. I will have to give Little Rock a consideration on my next road trip. Thanks for the insights. —Kelly Theodore

 

06.29.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Southern ComfortHey Byron, I know you've been up a few times but, you should check out the Northbank in Vancouver every once in a while, on a Friday night you'll find a multi-cultural extraviganza of folks that have no option but to get along in our city's only Gay Bar. Hope to see you soon!—Mikey

 

08.01.2006 at 09:00 Reply
Southern ComfortI just had to comment on this after my friend, a recent Portland emigre, pointed me to your article. He and I both are Little Rock natives, he's straight, I'm gay. I just wrote him and asked if he had any positive comments about the queer dating pool in Portland, as I feel that LR is quite the dry gulch itself. Now, don't get me wrong; one can have a lot of fun and find a good deal of acceptance among other gays in LR. However, dating inside this scene is a little different. There are unspoken rules for behavior and dress for the various "scenes" here, and I don't quite know what one is to do if one does not fit within one of the different scenes, as I do not. Well, welcome to LR when you get here. It'll be interesting to read the follow-up report.—JW

 

12.30.2008 at 04:33 Reply
Wes
You guys really gotta quit falling victim to stereotypes...Middle America is not always what you think it is, just like homosexuals are not always what Middle America thinks they are. I think its funny how hypocritical we all are.

 

 
 

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