This year’s 46th annual San Francisco Pride Celebration was charged with an energy that was at once hopeful and conflicted.
Sunday’s event is just two weeks after 49 people were gunned down at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida. Though the pain is fresh, tens of thousands of LGBTQ folks from the Bay Area and around the world came out to the nation’s largest pride parade and celebration.
Sierra Valencia consoles her roommate Ryan Kleiner at a memorial for the victims of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida on the corner of 18th and Castro Streets. It's their first San Francisco Pride but their friend Tyler Adamson (right) has been to a different Pride celebration every weekend this month.
Patrik Lundh carries his 3-year-old daughter, Anika Nayak-Lundh on his shoulders. Lundh says that the Orlando shooting only made me want to celebrate Pride more, to feel the unity against the hatred with so many horrible things happening in the world right now. Pride for Lundh means "tolerance, love, openness and hope."
Ralph Boethling, with the Church of 8 Wheels, skated around the parade. "People just want to love each other," says Boethling. "What could possibly be wrong with that?" Boethling has been coming to Pride for almost 10 years.
The parade started at the Embarcadero and followed along Market Street for almost two miles before ending at the Civic Center Plaza where parade-goers were met with metal detectors and police screening.