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But the parade and festival this year have been mired in debate, especially over the festival headliner, Kehlani, and the singer’s remarks on Israel’s war in Gaza, which have prompted dozens of ...
More than 30 organizations came together for the event, called J-Pride, and corporate sponsors included the San Diego Gulls and Jamul Casino. Politicians who decided to sit out the annual San Diego ...
Flickinger said San Diego Pride has discussed the Kehlani concerns with community members, but she’s concerned by efforts to pull funding from Pride events, seeing them as part of a broader ...
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — If San Diego Pride felt bigger this year, that's because it was! Event organizers say they exceeded their 2025 ticket goal, selling more than 31,000 festival tickets this year ...
San Diego Pride is enhancing security measures for this weekend's celebrations as tens of thousands of people are expected to attend the annual event. The Pride Parade, which brings out roughly ...
San Diego Pride stuck with its choice to keep Kehlani as a headliner, despite high-profile cancellations in New York’s Central Park and Cornell University, and the singer dropping out of a San ...
By James Miller • Times of San Diego About 500 people showed up for the first J Pride Festival, an offshoot event launched after a rift with San Diego Pride over the singer Kehlani.
San Diego Pride says they’ve donated $3.5 million, raised through ticket and drink sales, to support organizations dedicated to advocating for LGBTQ+ rights.
Jewish organizations create San Diego Pride alternative … News / Jul 11, 2025 / 10:13 PM PDT ...
This is the 10 “Light up the Cathedral” interfaith Pride celebration, and San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria says he’s seen the fight for gay rights reach heights he never could have imagined.
The 2025 San Diego Pride parade kicked off Saturday morning in the heart of Hillcrest with more than 220 groups marching. By M.G. Perez • Published July 19, 2025 • Updated on July 19, 2025 at ...
The San Diego Pride Parade was shorter than usual, with a marked absence of many corporations, national law enforcement agencies, and military contractors — unlike previous years.