Hurricane
Katrina
caused
the
official
cancellation
of
the
gay
Southern
Decadence
celebration,
but
a
few
revelers
still
left
in
the
city
carried
on
the
annual
parade
tradition.
On
Sunday,
Sept.
4,
several
dozen
parade-goers
celebrated
the
day
that
would
have
otherwise
drawn
a
crowd
of
more
than
100,000.
Southern
Decadence
is
one
of
the
top
five
tourist
attractions
with
the
greatest
economic
impact
to
the
city,
according
to
the
event’s
Web
site.
During
the
makeshift
parade,
Johnny
White’s
Sports
Bar
was
the
only
French
Quarter
bar
open,
according
to
employee
Larry
Hirst.
“This
bar
has
never
closed
in
14
years,
so
there
were
people
in
here
while
the
hurricane
was
blowing
over,”
Hirst
said.
“During
this
storm
the
French
Quarter
came
out
virtually
unscathed
in
relation
to
what’s
all
around
us.
We’re
high
and
dry.”
Hirst
said
Tuesday
that
the
local
bar
was
packed
with
customers
and
that
the
tradition
of
New
Orleans
will
continue,
even
through
times
of
tragedy.
“The
spirit
of
New
Orleans
will
never
die,”
he
said.
“People
will
come
back,
we’ll
rebuild
this
city…
and
we’ll
be
better
than
ever.”
Katrina
couldn’t
stop
Rip
Naquin-Delain
from
celebrating
Southern
Decadence
either
—
even
though
he
was
far
away
from
New
Orleans
.
Naquin-Delain,
who
operates
www.southerndecadence.com,
organized
an
unofficial
“Southern
Decadence
in
Exile”
celebration
dubbed
“
Floatin'
Floozies”
Wednesday
in
Lafayette.
“We
were
contacted
by
a
lot
of
our
friends
that
are
staying
in
the
Morgan
city
areas,
Lake
Charles,
Lafayette
and
Baton
Rouge
area
and
they
all
wanted
to
get
together
since
we
missed
Decadence,”
Naquin-Delain
said
the
morning
of
the
event.
“It’s
going
to
be
more
like
Southern
Decadence
was
in
the
beginning,
with
a
bunch
of
friends
getting
together
and
we’re
going
between
the
two
bars
in
Lafayette,”
he
said.
Naquin-Delain
said
he
was
unable
to
contact
the
two
grand
marshals
slated
to
appear
at
the
official
event,
but
hoped
they
could
attend.
He
was
unsure
how
many
people
would
participate
at
press
time.
The
defiant
Southern
Decadence
celebrations
drew
criticism
from
some
groups
who
oppose
gay
rights.
The
“idea
that
human
beings
are
continuing
to
party
while
hundreds
of
thousands
of
fellow
citizens
are
starving,
dying
and
suffering
from
a
multitude
of
sicknesses
brings
into
focus
the
real
lack
of
judgment
these
constant
advocates
of
special
gay
rights
demonstrate
in
times
of
crisis,”
wrote
“ex-gay”
James
Hartline
on
World
Net
Daily,
a
conservative
news
source.
But
Naquin-Delain,
a
New
Orleans
resident
for
the
past
20
years,
said
there’s
no
harm
in
the
celebration.
“I
know
that
there’s
been
a
lot
of
destruction
and
death.
The
thing
is,
life
goes
on
and
we
want
to
celebrate
who
we
are
and
Southern
Decadence
has
always
been
something
for
and
by
the
people,”
he
said.
“It’s
always
been
a
celebrating
of
life,
music
and
culture,
and
since
we’re
all
here
and
there’s
nothing
going
on,
I
don’t
see
any
harm
in
holding
it.”
Southern
Decadence
isn’t
the
only
gay
event
that
changed
plans
after
Katrina.
The
National
GLBT
Business
Convention,
presented
by
Echelon
Magazine,
originally
scheduled
for
Oct.
21-Nov.
1
at
the
Park
Plaza
Hotel
in
New
Orleans
,
was
moved
to
the
Wyndham
Anatole
in
Dallas
,
Texas
.
"We
really
wanted
to
hang
on
to
New
Orleans
despite
the
hurricane
to
the
point
that
it
was
still
promoted
in
our
Tuesday
[Aug.
30]
newsletter
that
it
would
be
in
New
Orleans,”
said
Michael
Lamb,
Echelon
magazine
publisher.
“After
we
heard
that
80
percent
of
the
city
was
under
water,
we
pretty
much
had
no
choice
but
to
move
the
convention.”
Lamb
said
he
was
unable
to
reach
New
Orleans
city
officials
before
deciding
to
move
the
convention,
but
he
doubted
the
city
would
be
able
to
welcome
visitors
by
the
convention
date.
“I
think
we’re
doing
them
a
service
at
this
point,”
Lamb
said.
“I’m
sure
they’re
not
looking
to
bring
in
people
to
the
city
as
they’re
evacuating
practically
most
of
the
residents.”
But
New
Orleans
will
need
gay
tourists
when
the
city
is
reconstructed,
said
Brian
Sands,
who
has
lived
in
the
French
Quarter
for
17
years.
Sands
evacuated
the
night
before
Katrina
hit,
traveling
to
Montgomery,
Ala.,
to
stay
with
friends,
and
has
since
made
the
trek
to
Atlanta.
With
a
background
in
retail
sales,
Sands
said
he
is
optimistic
about
the
city’s
future.
“From
what
I’ve
heard
the
French
Quarter
didn’t
...