Gay internet
Grindr - Gay Dating & Chat
About this app
Grindr is the world’s #1 free dating app serving the LGBTQ community. If you’re gay, bi, trans, lgbtq+, or even just curious, Grindr is the optimal and easiest way to meet new people for friendships, dates, and whatever else you’re looking for.
On a trip? Grindr is an indispensable tool for LGBTQ travelers—log in to meet locals and get recommendations for bars, restaurants, events, and more. With Grindr in your pocket, you’ll always be connected to other LGBTQ people around you and have your finger on the pulse of what’s happening.
Ready to get started? Creating your profile is easy, and you can share as much or little about yourself as you like. Within minutes you’ll be ready to connect, chat, and convene up with people adjacent you.
Grindr is faster and better than ever:
• Observe people nearby based on your location
• Chat and share private photos
• Insert tags to share your interests
• Search tags to find others based on their interests
• Create confidential albums to share (and unshare) multiple photos at once
• Filter your seek to find what you want
• Star your favorites and block others
• Notify people easily and safely
Looking for
Screenshots
Description
Grindr is the world’s #1 free dating app serving the LGBTQ community. If you’re gay, bi, transsexual, queer, or even just curious, Grindr is the best and easiest way to meet new people for friendships, hookups, dates, and whatever else you’re looking for.
On a trip? Grindr is an indispensable tool for LGBTQ travelers—log in to encounter locals and get recommendations for bars, restaurants, events, and more. With Grindr in your pocket, you’ll always be connected to other LGBTQ people around you and have your finger on the pulse of what’s happening.
Ready to get started? Creating your profile is easy, and you can share as much or little about yourself as you appreciate. Within minutes you’ll be ready to connect, chat, and meet up with people near you.
Grindr is faster and better than ever:
• See people nearby based on your location
• Chat and share confidential photos
• Add tags to share your interests
• Seek tags to find others based on their interests
• Create private albums to share (and unshare) multiple photos at once
• Filter your search to discover what you want
• Celebrity your favorites and block others
• Report people easily and safely
Looking for even more? Upgra
You MUST select the filter for LGBTQ
NOTEWORTHY ONLINE GROUPS
SUNDAY
Newcomers One Evening at a Time (Open to all)
am eastern
Zoom ID:
Passcode:
*Verified on Parade 13,
All Recovery AA Meeting
9am eastern
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on March 13,
Rainbow Recovery CMA Meeting
5pm mountain time
Zoom ID:
Passcode:
*Verified on Rally 13,
12 & 12 Group
12am pacific
Zoom ID:
Passcode: No Passcode
*Verified on March 13,
MONDAY
All Recovery AA Meeting
9am eastern
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on March 13,
Meditation Monday Group (Open to all)
12am pacific
Zoom ID:
Passcode: No Passcode
*Verified on March 13,
Quarantined Florida NA Meeting
7pm eastern
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on March 13,
TUESDAY
All Recovery AA Meeting
9am eastern
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on March 13,
Random Topic Tuesday Group
12am pacific
Zoom ID:
Passcode: No Passcode
*Verified on March 13,
Quarantined Florida NA Meeting
7pm eastern
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on March 13,
Gratitude All Year AA Group
pm central
Zoom ID:
Password:
*Verified on Pride 13,
Bring Your Own Big Book AA Group
12 & 12
pm pacific
The Internet made me gay: growing up queer during the pandemic
Living the vertical life
It’s an unspoken tradition here in the Philippines for relatives to demand girls at family reunions if they have a boyfriend. Never is it: “Do you have a boyfriend or girlfriend?” Always, that straight-to-the-point question: “Do you have an opposite-gender friend that you prefer to engage in quixotic activities with?”
Most of the time, I’ve always answered that peculiar question with a No, I don’t have a boyfriend. It felt like the polite thing to do. I never questioned their inquiries, nor did I include the courage to amend them with a “or girlfriend?” I knew that this was a tradition I had to procure in line with, lest I be ostracized by the very people who raised or befriended me.
Despite this, it was rather easy for me to accept my bisexuality. In my younger brain, I thought that since I liked men too, it would be easier for me to hide whatever feelings I had for women. “I just don’t have to mention it,” I told myself. I wasn’t ready for people to know that I was different. This internal rationale was a desperate act to prove to everyone else that I was just like them, not so
.

The Internet made me gay: growing up queer during the pandemic
Living the vertical life
It’s an unspoken tradition here in the Philippines for relatives to demand girls at family reunions if they have a boyfriend. Never is it: “Do you have a boyfriend or girlfriend?” Always, that straight-to-the-point question: “Do you have an opposite-gender friend that you prefer to engage in quixotic activities with?”
Most of the time, I’ve always answered that peculiar question with a No, I don’t have a boyfriend. It felt like the polite thing to do. I never questioned their inquiries, nor did I include the courage to amend them with a “or girlfriend?” I knew that this was a tradition I had to procure in line with, lest I be ostracized by the very people who raised or befriended me.
Despite this, it was rather easy for me to accept my bisexuality. In my younger brain, I thought that since I liked men too, it would be easier for me to hide whatever feelings I had for women. “I just don’t have to mention it,” I told myself. I wasn’t ready for people to know that I was different. This internal rationale was a desperate act to prove to everyone else that I was just like them, not so
.