Pulse 2019 Extra Quality | Deluxe & Certified

For the LGBTQ+ community and the Latinx community of Orlando, 2019 was not a year of closure. It was a year of reckoning. Walking past the iconic purple facade in 2019 was a jarring experience for locals. The club had been shuttered since the attack that claimed 49 lives and injured 53 others. For nearly three years, the site was a makeshift memorial—a sea of wilting flowers, cracked candles, dripping paint from murals, and laminated photos of victims nailed to chain-link fences.

In December 2019, workers carefully removed the iconic "Pulse" sign from the marquee. It was placed in storage, awaiting a future museum display. For a moment, the street looked like any other strip of South Orange Avenue. pulse 2019

That year, the U.S. government finally added the Pulse shooting to the FBI’s list of hate crime investigations. While the shooter had been killed, the designation allowed the Bureau to study the attack as a targeted act of homophobia. For the LGBTQ+ community and the Latinx community

ORLANDO, Fla. – In the early morning hours of June 12, 2016, the Pulse nightclub was a sanctuary. By sunrise, it was a crime scene. Three years later, in the summer of 2019, the site of the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history (at the time) existed in a complex limbo—no longer an active nightclub, not yet a finished memorial, but a sacred, quiet space where grief and activism converged. The club had been shuttered since the attack

"I was at a bar in Tampa last month, and a balloon popped," says "Marco," a 34-year-old survivor who asked to use a pseudonym. "I hit the floor. Twenty other people hit the floor. We looked at each other, and we all knew. We were reliving Pulse in a parking lot two hours away."

In 2019, Pulse was no longer just a place. It had become a verb.