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Berlin opened on Belmont Avenue in 1983 and has maintained its radical queer character through four decades without capitulating to commercial pressures or mainstream expectations. The name nods to the sexual freedom of Weimar-era Berlin; the reality of the club has lived up to that reference in ways most venues do not. Berlin's identity is explicitly counter-cultural: the music runs from goth and industrial to new wave, post-punk, synth-pop, and queer electronic — genres that are underrepresented in the mainstream gay club circuit. The crowd reflects this: an unusually diverse mix of gay men, lesbians, bisexual people, trans and non-binary people, and straight allies who understand that the most interesting party in Chicago on a given night is at Berlin. The club books some of the city's best drag acts and queer performers for regular events; the programming is adventurous in a way that larger venues cannot afford to be. The Belmont Avenue location, a block from the Belmont L station, puts it slightly outside Boystown proper — a geographical distance that mirrors the club's deliberate positioning outside the mainstream gay scene. For visitors who find Halsted Street's bars too familiar, Berlin is the alternative.
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