Look, we're not here to tell anyone how to spend their Saturday night. San Francisco has always been a city that celebrates self-expression, and that's genuinely one of its strengths. If you want to grab overpriced cocktails and enjoy some drag performances, have at it. Freedom means freedom for everyone, full stop.
But here's where we raise an eyebrow: events like these increasingly blur the line between genuine community celebration and marketing gimmick. The details on this one are thin — almost suspiciously thin — which usually means the real product being sold is the vibe, not the value. When ticket prices and drink minimums start adding up, it's worth asking what you're actually paying for.
Meanwhile, SF's entertainment and nightlife scene continues to struggle with the very real consequences of city policy. Small venue owners are drowning in permit fees and regulatory red tape. Bars that have served communities for decades are closing because the city can't figure out how to make doing business here affordable. The bureaucratic maze of hosting any event in San Francisco — from liquor licenses to sound permits — practically guarantees that only well-funded promoters can play the game.
So if you're heading to the Dyevesment Bash, enjoy yourself. Seriously. But maybe also ask why it's getting harder and harder for the scrappy, grassroots events that used to define this city to even exist. The problem isn't too many parties — it's a city government that's partying with your tax dollars while making it nearly impossible for anyone else to throw one.



