Gay Bar Reveal: Difference between revisions
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{{trope}}
{{quote|''"Wait a minute... There's something bothering me about this place... I know! [[Comically Missing the Point|This lesbian bar doesn't have a fire exit!]] Enjoy your deathtrap, ladies!"''|'''Homer Simpson''', ''[[The Simpsons (
[[Rated "M" for Manly|Manfred M. Manly]] wanders the streets looking for a burly bar where he can makes a [[Drink Order]] of his favourite [[Gargle Blaster]], proposition women with crude sexual [[Double Entendre
He finds himself a bar or club with broad strapping patrons, perhaps full of bikers or steel workers, deep bass music and tall erect steel bars for extra manly effect.
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Manfred M. Manly has just had the Gay Bar Reveal. He has walked into a bar or club ignorant of its nature and slowly realises that it's a gay bar. It normally only happens to the character most likely to freak out about it, sometimes they'll actually be accompanied by someone who does get it quicker than them or even lead them there who provides a foil for the few moments before they catch on. Sometimes Manford will have the conspicuous homosexual elements pointed out to him but automatically imagines it to all be part of manly bonding.
The bar itself can vary in terms of its queerness. At one end of the scale it can be completely inconspicuous until someone points out that there are only male patrons and a few of them are holding hands. The bar can often at the point of the
{{examples}}
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== Fan Fiction ==
* In the ''Zelda'' AU fic [http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3105749/1/The_Weekly_Hyrule_News "The Weekly Hyrule News"], Link, Ralph, and Kafei all go to an unfamiliar bar to engage in a little underage drinking. Link catches on pretty quickly that there’s a reason all the patrons are seemingly either “alone or with a friend,” and gets a kick out of watching the other two react once they figure it out. [[Have I Mentioned I Am Heterosexual Today?|Kafei]] wants to leave, but Ralph convinces him to stay when he points out the [[Girl
== Film ==
* In ''[[
* The bar where Stifler shows off his dancing skills in ''[[American Pie]] 3''. This being Stifler, he didn't realize which kind of bar it was until the others told him to look around and pay attention. [[Punctuated!
* Done with masterful subtlety in ''[[The Crying Game]]''.
* ''[[But I'm a Cheerleader]]'' has a scene where the rest of the kids at the True Directions camp (a Christian based camp where gay kids go to be 'cured') are leaving for the night to 'go have some fun.' The lead character Megan doesn't realize where they're going, and even though the outside of the bar has a huge rainbow sign that says 'The Cocksucker,' it takes her a few minutes to catch on. Megan questions why they went to a gay bar when they're trying to stop being gay, while the other campers point out, "Where else would we go?"
* One of the more famous examples is the Blue Oyster Bar, a [[Running Gag]] from the ''[[Police Academy]]'' movies. [[Jerkass]] characters will oftentimes be tricked into heading there, only to end up in the tight embrace of [[Manly Gay]] bikers.
* ''[[Chasing Amy]]'' had this in the second act. It's a double-whammy for the protagonist, as this is how he finds out the object of his affections is a lesbian, complete with alarm klaxons!
* ''[[
== Literature ==
* In ''Demon Blues'' by [[Esther Friesner]], one of the straight characters stumbles into one of these crying about the girl he can't get, proceeds to get so drunk he doesn't catch on, and when the bartender is worried about him, gets taken home by a chivalrous time-traveling [[Richard the Lion Heart]]. He pieces it all together the next morning.
* Happens in ''[[My
== Live Action TV ==
* In an episode of ''[[In Plain Sight]]''. While helping Mary clear one of her witnesses of a murder, Marshall visits the victim's favorite bar and talks with the bartender, who mentions that the victim always stood by his people. After wondering what that means, a confused Marshall looks around and realizes that all the patrons were male and many were holding hands...
* One episode of ''[[
* In the ''[[Murphy Brown]]'' episode "The Anchorman", Jim Dial fulfills his dream of opening a classy English-style pub, and it quickly becomes popular among the gay crowd. The trope is averted in that the customers are never shown as oversexualized leather daddies or weird crossdressers; Jim only realises what's happened when someone points out to him that all of his customers are men, and some of them are holding hands. Otherwise, it's just another spot where businessmen go to socialize after work.
* ''[[Filthy Rich
{{quote|
'''Men at bar:''' Yes.
'''Landlord:''' This is a gay pub.
[Cut to Richie and Eddie being hurled out of the pub] }}
* An episode of ''[[Coach]]'' had this. The title coach (of American football; guess his attitude) ended up concerned that one of his students (I don't remember if he was a player) was less than heterosexual. He ends up in a peaceful bar talking with the student, and everything is fine. A slow dance tune comes on, and two young people go to have a quiet dance on the floor behind Coach Fox. They have a gender in common ...
** Played surprisingly straight considering the premise of the show and the time it was made, and still managed to be funny. The bar patrons in the reveal are just regular guys, not an assortment of stereotypes. Coach Fox is uncomfortable with the situation, but not freaked out or horrified. He agrees to treat the football player (Terry) like any other player on the team. For starters, a player in training is not allowed to stay out late, so Coach offers to drive Terry home. A couple of other players recognize Coach Fox leaving with the young man. The dialogue goes something like this:
{{quote|
'''Coach (awkwardly):''' Oh...uh...I'm just taking Terry home. (Realizing how that sounds) Damn! }}
* Played "straight" on ''[[The Parkers]].'' When Nikki and her friends investigate Professor Oglevee's shady new girlfriend, they track her to the bar where she works and comment on the lack of men there. When the bar's manager informs them that yes, the girl in question is gay and yes, the bar caters to lesbians, Nikki and her friends react as if told it was the fifth level of Hell. One would think Mo'nique would know better, considering comedienne's large gay following.
* Parodied on the UK sketch show ''[[Goodness Gracious Me]]''. Two underage boys want to be served drinks in a pub, so to look older, they wear glasses (and can't see a thing.) When they remove the glasses, they realize it's actually a gay bar full of [[Village People]] lookalikes, and run away screaming.
* Played with in [https://web.archive.org/web/20130625175722/http://thenewgay.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/curt_glee_rolling_stone.jpg this] promotional pic for ''[[
** Maybe the other bar patrons just noticed the guy with the martini was underaged.
* ''[[It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
* One ''[[Mad TV]]'' sketch had [[Funny Foreigner|Miss Swan]] end up in a [[Unusual Euphemism|"monkey in the bush"]] bar. She led them in a rendition of ''[[ABBA|Dancing Queen]]''.
* ''[[
* In the ''[[Only Fools and Horses]]'' episode "Go West, Young Man", Del and Rodney go to a wine bar, and while Rodney has his drink, Del tries to chat up two characters in dresses we only see from the back. He quickly returns.
{{quote|
'''Rodney''': Yeah? Are they a couple of ravers?
'''Del''': No, they're a couple of geezers! }}
* Happened on ''[[3rd Rock
* Referenced in ''[[
* Referenced on ''[[
{{quote|
== Western Animation ==
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** Also on the ''Simpsons'' episode "Homer's Phobia" (where Homer makes friends with a kitschy antique store owner who looks like [and is voiced by] John Waters, but breaks off the friendship when he finds out that John is gay and Bart may be influenced by him), Homer takes Bart to a steel mill, intending to straighten him out by showing manly straight guys at work. However it turns out to be a gay steel mill that turns into a gay dance club/bar after the work day is over.
** It gets flipped around in the episode "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses">
{{quote|
'''[[Camp Gay]] Bargoer''': You mean it's not? Ugh. Wrong again,"Gay Guide to Springfield". }}
** A planned but scrapped joke in "Flaming Moes" had a couple of gay guys entering Flaming Moes thinking it was a gay bar and leaving disappointedly. The censors wouldn't allow it.
* ''[[
** In the same episode the trope is inverted when Peter mistakes the newly British Clam for a gay bar.
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[[Category:Nightlife Index]]
[[Category:Surprise Tropes]]
[[Category:
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