queer coffeehouses rj joseph

Cuties is in trouble. The Los Angeles-based coffee shop that serves as an all-ages alternative to the bar scene for the queer community is in danger of having to shutter. With a focus on serving the LA queer communityโ€”not just those with the money to afford to buy a coffee (which as RJ Josephโ€™s article for Sprudge elucidates, queer community members โ€œface higher rates of unemployment, homelessness, and poverty than their non-LGBTQ+ counterpartsโ€)โ€”Cuties has always relied on the financial backing of supporters. But that backing is running out.

In a recent Facebook post, Cuties entreated their followers to give to their Patreon account in order to keep the doors open. As the post explains, there is a big need for all-ages safe spaces for LGBTQIA+ peoples, not just in LA but world wide. โ€œEvery week I get messages from our queer & trans kin all over the world asking us to open a Cuties in their hometown,โ€ the post explains. The need is there but the funding isnโ€™t always. From a Medium post by Cuties co-founder Iris Bainum-Houle:

advert but first coffee cookbook now available

 

Creating Cuties is the most empowering and meaningful experience of my life. It is also the most challenging. This work has connected me deeply to a community Iโ€™ve been isolated from for most of my life. It has also given me the opportunity to respond in kind and connect other members of my community to one another. On the hard days (and there are many) the ability to bring the community together is what keeps me going. I love seeing faces light up when people come into the shop for the first time. I adore watching folx connect over coffee. I delight in providing moments of whimsy and softness in a world not built for either.

With programs like the suspended coffeeโ€”where patrons can buy two coffees, one for themselves and one to be redeemed by a future customer in needโ€”and the community tabโ€”where non-Angelinos can donate to make sure everyone is able to get a beverage and feel comfortable in the spaceโ€”Cuties focus is on anything but the bottom line. But nonetheless, bills need to be paid and staff compensated in order to keep this truly necessary space accessible.

There are a lot of ways you can help. You can sign up for their newsletter and pledge $5 a month to Cutiesโ€™ Patreon or you can give a one-time donation, both of which can be done here. Anything helps. And if you donโ€™t have the expendable income to help financially, you can share their Patreon โ€œon all of your social accounts, on your newsletter, on your event pages, send it via text or email to people you know in the community & allies! Call your family members who say they have โ€˜nothing against gay people.โ€™ Ask them to put their $ where their mouth is.โ€

To read more about Cuties current situation and the important role they play in the community, Iris Bainum-Houle, fellow co-founder Virginia Bauman, and social media coordinatorย Leslie Foster have all put their thoughts to paper via Medium posts, which can be found here, here, and here, respectively.

Zac Cadwaladerย is the news editor at Sprudge Media Network and a staff writer based in Dallas.ย Read more Zac Cadwaladerย on Sprudge.

Top image viaย In Los Angeles, Cuties Coffee Serves The Queer Community by RJ Joseph

banner advertising the book new rules of coffee