Image credit: Lunfarda Travel |
JOIN A QUEER HISTORY TOUR IN ARGENTINA
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Argentina, a traditionally conservative country, has emerged in the last two decades as a queer rights powerhouse. Since the early 2000s this country has legalized egalitarian marriage and introduced non-binary IDs, state-paid gender-affirming surgeries and IVF treatments. So how did this transformation come about in such a short time, you might ask? Join this Argentine queer history tour and find out!
| Image credit: Holiday Inn Celebration SW |
ENJOY GOLDEN GIRLS DRAG BRUNCH AT HOLIDAY INN CELEBRATION SW IN ORLANDO
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Who is the funniest Golden Girl of all time? Betty & Bea Against Humanity is a hilarious interactive musical game show in which two of televisions funniest legends ask the audience to finish famous lines from the show. Betty & Bea take you on an epic journey to determine who’s really the funniest! Is it the off-the-cuff TV star or the serious Broadway and sitcom dame? Join the event in Orlando at the Holiday Inn Celebration SW, Sunday 20 February. Brunch is served from 11 am to 12:30 pm and the show starts at 12:30 pm. Dress for a day on the lanai...caftans and Golden Girls attire strongly suggested. | Image credit: Virgin Atlantic |
LOVE IS IN THE AIR THIS SPRING: VIRGIN ATLANTIC TO HELP AMERICANS FIND LOVE IN LONDON
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Virgin Atlantic is providing a runway to love this Valentine's Day with "Tickets to Love," the opportunity for single Americans looking to forge fresh new connections to apply to fly across the Atlantic to find romance in London. Through 13 February, interested participants can pitch their story to the airline, explaining why they deserve a trip to the U.K. to find long-term love and what kind of romance they're looking for this spring. Virgin Atlantic will select eight winners to fly from New York to London in its Upper Class cabin on 11 March 2022.
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LGBTQ+ TRAVEL GUIDE TO NEW ZEALAND
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New Zealand is a magical land full of breathtaking nature, wild adventure and rich culture. Located about 1,200 miles east of Australia, New Zealand was first settled by Polynesians around 1300 A.D., who were followed by the first European arrival in 1642—though it would take nearly two centuries for permanent British settlement to begin in 1840. Today, a cultural mix of just under five million "Kiwis" call New Zealand home, most of whom live on the country's two main islands, named (easily enough) the North Island and the South Island. All told, the 600 or so islands of New Zealand comprise about 268,000 square kilometers (103,500 square miles), making the country slightly larger than the United Kingdom, but slightly smaller than Italy. The country has an excellent reputation in terms of LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion, and is generally considered a bit more progressive than its big sister to the west, Australia.
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TRAVEL GUIDES, EVENTS, TOURS, SPECIALS & MORE!
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