By Doug Rule on June 7, 2018 @ruleonwriting

The more things change, the more lower Delaware’s Rehoboth Beach has pretty much stayed the same over the years, give or take a bar or biergarten. And the consistency has made it the go-to destination of choice for LGBTQ Washington. Forget Ocean City Maryland or the Jersey Shore — this is where the gays are.
It all starts with Poodle Beach (1103 South Boardwalk), where the boardwalk ends. Poodle is still the main gay stretch of sand — though actual poodles and their owners, tend to congregate at North Shore Beach (15099 Cape Henlopen Dr., Lewes), way past the other end of town. Aqua Grill (57 Baltimore Ave.) has long been the place to see-and-be-seen after the beach thanks to its large outdoor patio right on the gayest block in town — not to mention its crew of shirtless bartenders. Several years ago, the Purple Parrot Grill (134 Rehoboth Ave.) significantly expanded its footprint, taking over the space behind it to create another open-air venue. And the leafy, lush backyard Biergarten is a perfectly beachy and inviting retreat complete with palm trees, sand, and picnic tables.
A block away is divey mainstay the (Frog) Pond (3 South First St.), popular with locals, live music fans, lesbians, and bears, the latter for the monthly FURst Friday Happy Hour. Meanwhile, just outside of Rehoboth proper are a few recently established venues popular with the local LGBTQ community, including neighboring lesbian-owned establishments Murph’s Beef & Ale and Java Jukebox (37169 Rehoboth Ave. Ext.), which regularly hosts women’s parties featuring DJ Nan.
Back towards the beach is Rehoboth’s one true new bar for 2018: Diego’s Hideaway (37298 Rehoboth Ave. Ext.). Darryl and Joe Ciarlante-Zuber, former owners of Dos Locos (208 Rehoboth Ave.), bought and renovated the business that had been operating as the Double L, which had fallen on hard times — it didn’t even open until halfway through the season last year. While no longer an explicitly leather/fetish venue, the brighter, tropical-minded Diego’s nevertheless will continue the fetish-oriented party Gear It UP Fridays, as well as Philadelphia-based DJ Steve Durkin’s popular Saturday event ManDance — billed as “the biggest gay dance party in Rehoboth.” (That is, obviously excepting for Sundance, the annual Labor Day fundraiser.)
Of course, one gay venue has always towered above the rest. The centrally located Blue Moon (35 Baltimore Ave.) remains grand central for gay Rehoboth in so many ways. It offers the best variety in live performance, particularly drag — national stars Sherry Vine, Miss Richfield 1981, and Dixie Longate will appear this summer, in addition to the Blue Moon Divas. And among those former pop stars and disco divas who should have been a bigger deal, few can top the Moon’s resident belter Pamala Stanley, who performs every night and sometimes twice on Sunday. Nobody has been “Coming Out Of Hiding” as much as she.
Even after 37 years, the Moon, under the watch of Executive Chef Lion Gardner, is still a top contender for best place to eat in restaurant-rich Rehoboth. Several other longtime fixtures also remain top-flight considerations — from influential, 44-year-old gourmet Back Porch Cafe (59 Rehoboth Ave.), to fine-dining Eden (23 Baltimore Ave.) and its more affordable offshoot Jam (21 Baltimore Ave.), to the oft-overlooked Confucius Chinese Cuisine (57 Wilmington Ave.). Among upscale seafood options, one newer spot worth its catch is Dogfish Brewery’s casual-chic Chesapeake & Maine (316 Rehoboth Ave.). Meanwhile, one notable gay-owned restaurant set to open later in the season is The Pines (56 Baltimore Ave.), a casual eatery in the former Java Beach/Hobos space, across Baltimore Avenue from Aqua, and coming from Tyler Townsend and Bob Suppies.
All in all, Rehoboth remains largely unchanged, and certainly recognizable to anyone who’s ever spent any significant time at the resort in recent decades. It’s still as gay as you remember it — if not a little gayer — and certainly more lesbian and queer in general. It’s also more appreciably LGBTQ-friendly now — in no small part because of the work of Steve Elkins, who co-founded the pro-LGBTQ organization CAMP Rehoboth (camprehoboth.com) in 1991 at the height of anti-gay sentiment, conveyed in a popular bumper sticker at the time: “Keep Rehoboth a Family Town.”
The unofficial mayor — and certainly the gay mayor — of Rehoboth, the 67-year-old Elkins died of lymphoma in March, leaving behind his longtime husband and CAMP co-founder Murray Archibald. Among other advances in making Rehoboth LGBTQ-friendly, Elkins was instrumental in landing the Rehoboth Beach Convention Center (229 Rehoboth Ave.) for Sundance — at the time, 1994, getting approval from a city-owned facility for a party where many gay men would be shirtless and dancing suggestively was so controversial as to be all-but unthinkable. Although full details, including the party’s DJ, have not been revealed, the 31st Sundance is set for Labor Day Weekend with a return to the Convention Center, newly reopened after a two-year renovation. That’s one small sign of continued progress — and of Elkins’ continuing legacy.
For more information on Rehoboth Beach and the beaches of Delaware, visit visitdelaware.com.






By John Riley on December 21, 2025 @JRileyMW
A transgender woman has filed a lawsuit against hotel giant Hilton, alleging that she was assaulted by a security guard at the Hilton Dallas Lincoln Centre while she was a registered guest.
According to the complaint, filed in the 192nd Civil District Court in Dallas County, Kimberly Barnett, an Afro-Latina transgender woman from Nebraska, was staying at the hotel in late June while attending Dallas Pride Weekend and other LGBTQ events.
Barnett returned to the Hilton Dallas Lincoln Centre around 3:45 a.m. on June 24 and attempted to "valet her vehicle," according to the lawsuit.
By Maximilian Sandefer on December 9, 2025
Racers, start your engines. RuPaul’s Drag Race has revealed the 14 new queens set to grace the runway for its 18th season as they vie for the title of America’s Next Drag Superstar and a grand prize of $200,000.
Premiering January 2 on MTV, the season will be accompanied by another run of RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked, where viewers get the chance to get an inside look at all the tea being spilt behind the scenes of the hit show.
The new season will also feature a bit of a twist from the outset. Unlike the recent spate of season-premiere episodes that feature a talent show -- remember Season 15, when the judges were somehow unimpressed with Irene the Alien’s keen ability to make a glass of ice water? -- the competition appears to be starting with a sewing challenge.
By John Riley on November 24, 2025 @JRileyMW
The Alabama Public Library Service Board of Directors, which oversees the state’s public libraries, has voted to remove books discussing transgender identities from teen and children’s sections statewide.
On November 20 -- which coincided with Transgender Day of Remembrance -- the board approved an addition to an existing rule requiring youth sections to be free of "sexually explicit or other material deemed inappropriate." The amended rule now specifies that materials discussing "transgender procedures, gender ideology, or the concept of more than two biological genders" are inappropriate for library sections aimed at children and teens.
These are challenging times for news organizations. And yet it’s crucial we stay active and provide vital resources and information to both our local readers and the world. So won’t you please take a moment and consider supporting Metro Weekly with a membership? For as little as $5 a month, you can help ensure Metro Weekly magazine and MetroWeekly.com remain free, viable resources as we provide the best, most diverse, culturally-resonant LGBTQ coverage in both the D.C. region and around the world. Memberships come with exclusive perks and discounts, your own personal digital delivery of each week’s magazine (and an archive), access to our Member's Lounge when it launches this fall, and exclusive members-only items like Metro Weekly Membership Mugs and Tote Bags! Check out all our membership levels here and please join us today!
California Man Pleads Not Guilty After Gay Man Left in Coma
Erik Bottcher Drops Congressional Bid for State Senate Run
Brian Footer Suspends Bid for Ward 1 D.C. Council Seat
“Femboy” Tops PornhubGay Searches in 2025
Jacob Dickey Comes Up Lucky as Sky Masterson
Most Sniffies Users Aren’t Gay, New Data Shows
The Housemaid: Sydney Sweeney Can’t Save This Thin Thriller
City Installs Rainbow Bike Racks After Pride Mural Is Paved Over
Trade at 10: Ed Bailey on His Career in D.C. Nightlife
Trans Woman Sues Hilton Over Alleged Assault by Security Guard
Most Sniffies Users Aren’t Gay, New Data Shows
Jacob Dickey Comes Up Lucky as Sky Masterson
Guys and Dolls at Shakespeare Theatre Company Is Showstopping
Erik Bottcher Drops Congressional Bid for State Senate Run
California Man Pleads Not Guilty After Gay Man Left in Coma
In Clay: A Revelatory One-Woman Musical at Signature Theatre
2025 Was Brutal — and LGBTQ Protest Became a Way to Survive
Brian Footer Suspends Bid for Ward 1 D.C. Council Seat
Mike Albo’s "Hologram Boyfriends" Explores Gay Identity
Trade at 10: Ed Bailey on His Career in D.C. Nightlife
Washington's LGBTQ Magazine
Follow Us:
· Facebook
· Twitter
· Flipboard
· YouTube
· Instagram
· RSS News | RSS Scene
Copyright ©2025 Jansi LLC.

You must be logged in to post a comment.