As of June 30, the campaign has raised more than $118,000.
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Within three days, the GoFundMe surpassed its original goal of $6,000 and ended up raising more than $50,000. “I want these kids to ask me those questions: Hell well, how did he do it? And can I do it?”Īfter Minko mentioned the GoFundMe, Saaka and his friends, energized with a desire to help the community, took to social media and publicized the campaign. “And to me, that’s what it’s all about,” Minko said. He began asking Minko about the business and how he was able to stay afloat during the pandemic. Saaka said he was struck by Minko’s dedication keeping Alibi open. “And I was like, how can we give back to the community? I was like, how can we give back to like a local Black business? And let's make it a gay one.”
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“I was in Harlem with some friends, not really doing anything, just being useless,” Saaka said. But then Minko encountered Malik Saaka, a 21-year-old, who helped bring significantly more attention to the GoFundMe campaign. Soon after, Alibi Lounge opened for takeout drinks and appetizers. And though he was initially uncomfortable asking for help, Minko also launched a GoFundMe in May with the goal of raising just $6,000. The owners of both Stonewall Inn and Henrietta Hudson have started GoFundMe campaigns to keep their bars open. “The bar business is recession proof - it’s not pandemic proof, though,” owner Lisa Cannistraci told NBC News. “Now that’s just not happening,” Stacey Lentz, a co-owner of Stonewall, said.Īn iconic NYC lesbian bar, Henrietta Hudson, might not re-open until next spring, according to the Times. The owners of the Stonewall Inn, a historic gay bar in the West Village, told the New York Times that last year, “hundreds of thousands of people” came to their bar throughout Pride month. But for queer establishments – which have historically operated as community centers and safe spaces for marginalized people – the threat is cultural, too, especially during Pride month. The pandemic has hurt businesses across the United States. “Running a small business, especially like a bar/restaurant, it’s a lot of work for no money.” “All of a sudden, we had no revenue, no income, no activity, and unfortunately, it put a dent on something that was already very precarious,” Minko said. He then reached out to the Small Business Association's Network for LGBT Businesses and got approved for a PPP loan.īut the money wasn’t enough to cover mounting rent and utility bills and sales tax. Minko said he was rejected twice for assistance from the federal Paycheck Protection Program, which chains including Shake Shack and Ruth’s Chris Steak House were not.
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This March, Alibi Lounge temporarily closed due to the coronavirus. “We want to have places where we feel like we can identify with the culture, with the atmosphere, with the sound, with the lights, with the music, with the people that go to these places,” he said. Minko said he’s proud of what he created: a place where LGBTQ+ people in Harlem can go to feel “automatically accepted, understood, and embraced.” By June 2016, he officially opened Alibi Lounge’s doors. Though Minko’s primary career was in law, he had experience opening bars in partnership with others. “ I walked about 20, 30, blocks, and I didn’t see anything that represented the LGBT image whatsoever.” I fell in love with my street,” Minko said. Minko, who is originally from Gabon, opened Alibi after moving to the neighborhood in 2015. The Harlem-based establishment is reportedly the last Black-owned gay bar in New York City.
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“I was wondering, was it worth it?”īut after a prolific GoFundMe campaign and what he describes as a renewed sense of responsibility, Minko said Alibi Lounge is thriving, even in the middle of a pandemic. “I was 75% done with the business,” Minko said to NowThis. When the coronavirus temporarily shuttered businesses across the country, Alexi Minko was nearly ready to give up on his bar, Alibi Lounge.