“RuPaul’s Drag Race” Recap Realness: I Wanna Text You Up

“RuPaul’s Drag Race” Recap Realness: I Wanna Text You Up

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The weekly return from the lip sync has become routine for the contestants, and it shows. Everyone says that this was an emotional elimination, but they’re all either too drained or too jaded to tangibly demonstrate any sense of empathy. They’ve become fabulous robots programmed to talk about how sad they are that Thorgy is gone. Luckily for the editors, their anger and desperation are still very real, especially in Derrick’s case. Chi Chi hangs the piñata by being the first to voice surprise that the Vegas Vacancy wasn’t on the chopping block, but Naomi ends up taking the most swings with her wiffle bat. For an audience tired of watching better queens sashay in favor of the Halfwit Brit-Brit, it’s a welcome catharsis.

s8e08 02Tensions are running so high that the next morning, we get another conversation-free entrance. It’s pretty much just a shot of Bob’s purse and then a cut straight to Ru’s video PSA about literacy. (Are you happy, Serena Cha Cha? #readabook) Luckily, the extended length of this episode means that there’s no rush to explain why we’re talking so much about libraries and reading when we done already done had that mini-challenge. So let’s kill some time with a puppet interlude, aka the Reading Challenge part 2! It’s no surprise that the hapless intern shoved behind the glory hole (whose job is, one assumes, usually MUCH more tiring than handing out dolls) gives Naomi and Derrick facsimiles of each other, nor is it shocking that they can’t even wait until the game starts to throw out some choice barbs. Similarly, Bob barely has her Kim Chi puppet in hand before she’s dropping it for comedic effect. But Chi Chi takes the win by delivering essentially the exact same skit that BenDeLaCreme did about Bianca Del Rio two seasons ago, except with a miniature pocketbook. But hey, if the producers are going to recycle the same storylines over and over, then the contestants might as well play along.

Of course, we can only play with toys for so long: the workroom is for working, and Ru has a super-sized assignment to keep her Top 5 on their toes. This week, they’ll be competing in the Book Ball, serving three looks: baby drag, mom drag, and paper drag. The construction is all just backdrop for Naomi and Derrick’s personal death match, of course. I’m not going to bother rehashing all of it, because let’s face it none of it is as funny as what I’ve said in previous recaps. But it is now my personal mission in life to give Leggy Smalls a giant hug for finally pointing out that a certain someone is Not a Twink, Not Yet A Bald Man. Also, for only being 21, she handles the whole interaction with a lot more poise and maturity than her supposedly professional counterpart.

s8e08 03While the ladies stitch and bitch, Ru wanders between tables, hungry for the human tears that keep her young. “Tell me about… your mother,” she whispers through a lurid grin. Unfortunately, no one bites in the moment. She gets Chi Chi to accept her country roots and grills Kim Chi for what seems like hours, but the closest she comes is unearthing a story about Bob’s mom’s health and waiting for her talking head interviewer to finish the job later. (Not shown: the three hooded monks who solemnly collect the precious liquid sadness from her face into a sacred urn that they will transport back to Mathu Anderson’s dungeon.) When Naomi says that being in the bottom two “literally” lit a fire under her ass, I’m inclined to believe her: the Supermodel of the World will stop at nothing to extract the salty lifeblood from your eyes.

Since the combination of high-pressure sewing and parental drama wasn’t enough to drive five people simultaneously into sobbing fits, Ru ups the ante even further by assigning the group a dance routine based on Jerri Blank without even bothering to justify how that connects to the literary theme. Chi Chi is told that she’ll be choreographing as reward for her puppet show earlier, but really it’s a punishment for being so upbeat and composed this week. The rehearsal process for the number is just an excuse to remind us that Kim Chi struggles with coordinated movement because she is a sentient wetsuit full of trained cats.

s8e08 04Since the rest of the workroom footage is just an extended argument about whether Bob or Derrick has the worst make-up (and we all know it’s Derrick), let’s just fast-forward to the mainstage, shall we? The image of a row of queens in cheap wigs and giant toothy inserts briefly causes me to worry that Robbie Turner has sent her clone army to destroy us, but it’s just our top five trying desperately to lip sync through unnecessary dental obstructions. (Seriously, guys: Jerri Blank’s signature underbite can be easily achieved without a Party City hillbilly costume.) The only good parts of the performance are Bob’s delivery of “crack cocaine” and Amy Sedaris’ existence. And really, the fact that World of Wonder could afford to get her into the studio to record this song means that she officially isn’t charging enough for those kinds of bookings.

For the Ball itself, there’s lots to love. Chi Chi steps up her game with her paper couture creation and Naomi remains regal and runway-ready throughout. They can’t compete with Kim Chi, though: by expertly weaving her high-concept looks into a fully realized story, she nails the assignment on multiple levels and soars to the top of the best-seller list. Sadly, the uniformly high quality of everyone else’s offerings makes Derrick’s ineptitude disastrously evident. Her clothes, brows, IQ, and personality are all so collectively underwhelming that she should have just kept walking off the runway, out of the studio, and into the ocean. And Bob did great because she’s Bob and she always does great, but someone’s got to win the lip sync.

s8e08 05And win she does, friends. You don’t take “The Drag Queen” as your last name without being supremely confident in that identity, and her expert delivery of Sylvester’s classic disco anthem gives us a good look at her extensive tool kit. By contrast, Derrick has always been a one-trick pony, and that horse has been dead for so long that there’s nothing left to beat. Lacking the ability to show us something we haven’t seen before, she impales herself on her own Spears and gets sent packing. Bob bids her a loving, heartfelt goodbye, disappointing me for the first time in the competition. I don’t mind if they’re friends, but I do mind having that blonde nobody on my TV for ten more seconds. Hug it out off-camera.

 

Chris J. Kelly performs under the drag name Ariel Italic and can be seen as one of the cohosts of Nobodies Hosting Drag Race every Monday night at Eastlands in Brooklyn, NY.

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‘Go-Go Boy Interrupted’ Faces Drag Queen Dilemmas – WATCH

‘Go-Go Boy Interrupted’ Faces Drag Queen Dilemmas – WATCH

go go boy interrupted

On this week’s episode of Go-Go Boy Interrupted, Danny continues on his quest to get his job back at Club PantherWarmth and takes his fight straight to the top.

But first, Danny tries to learn Span-ich with Pablo Hernandez so he can fulfill his lifelong dream of going to Rome  (yes, the one in Italy).

pablo

Then, it’s off to Ann Ziety’s office where we encounter Ann (Drew Droege) sans drag.

Will Danny be able to make his way back onto a box in time for Pride weekend?

Watch, below.

Catch up on season 2 of Go-Go Boy Interrupted HERE.

The post ‘Go-Go Boy Interrupted’ Faces Drag Queen Dilemmas – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.



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HRC Arkansas Works to Create Safer Worship Spaces for the LGBTQ Community

HRC Arkansas Works to Create Safer Worship Spaces for the LGBTQ Community

Post submitted by Rev. Dr. Denise Donnell, Senior Faith Organizer

Earlier this month, more than 75 local and visiting lay and clergy persons convened in Little Rock, Arkansas for a weekend “Embracing and Affirming LGBTQ Diversity and Inclusion within the Black Church.” HRC Arkansas and the Church Within a Church Movement presented the conference at the New Millennium Church. HRC Arkansas designed the flow for the three-day event, working to educate, celebrate and draw LGBTQ and non-LGBTQ people of faith together in covenantal relationship.

The guest speakers for the event were Bishop Tonyia Rawls, founding pastor of Sacred Souls Community Church in Charlotte, North Carolina and Rev. Dennis Wiley, co-pastor of Covenant Baptist United Church of Christ in Washington, D.C.

Currently, “self-avowed, practicing” gay and lesbian persons cannot be ordained in The United Methodist Church. According to the Book of Discipline: “The practice of homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching. Therefore self-avowed practicing homosexuals are not to be certified as candidates, ordained as ministers, or appointed to serve in The United Methodist Church.” Although some regions still raise obstacles, gay and lesbian persons who take a vow of abstinence are eligible for ordination according to church law.

At the end of our time together, Rev. Gilbert Caldwell (retired United Methodist clergy) asked the gathering to endorse a statement calling on the United Methodist Church to end this discriminatory stance. The attendees resoundingly agreed and signed their names in support of this request.

The legislative branch of the United Methodist Church—the General Conference—meets every four years to set church policy. The General Conference will convene next month from May 10-20 in Portland, Oregon.  Approximately 1,000 delegates (half lay leaders, half clergy) will gather to consider revisions to the Book of Resolutions, which makes pronouncements on social issues, and the Book of Discipline, which details church law. Decisions of the General Conference cannot be questioned until they are raised at its next convening. 

For more information on how to become involved with HRC Arkansas, click here.  

For more information about the United Methodist Church and the LGBTQ community, click here.

People look to their faith as a source of guidance and inspiration – and LGBTQ people and our family and friends are no different. The HRC Religion and Faith Program is working to create a world where nobody is forced to choose between who they are, whom they love and what they believe. Learn more here.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-arkansas-works-to-create-safer-worship-spaces-for-the-lgbtq-community?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Same-sex marriage finally approved in Isle of Man

Same-sex marriage finally approved in Isle of Man
Same-sex marriage comes to the Isle of Man

The Isle of Man has finally approved same-sex marriage.

The Marriage and Civil Partnership (Amendment) Bill had its third and final reading in the Legislative Council of the British crown dependency that sits between the UK and Ireland.

Six members voted in favor, and three were against.

The bill allows same-sex couples to get married and opposite-sex couples to civil partnerships. The latter is currently not available to straight people in the rest of the UK.

In October 2015, Chief Minister Allan Bell revealed he had been in a relationship with another man for the past 21 years.

He said legalizing same-sex marriage would draw a line under the Isle of Man’s ‘dark days’. In the 1980s, a campaign to decriminalize homosexuality (which punished gay sex with life imprisonment) was met with bigotry from the Manx parliament. Homosexuality was finally decriminalized in 1992.

Bell said: ‘Everyone who loves their partner, whether same-sex or otherwise, must have equal rights to share their lives. It’s a totally logical human right and human expectation that straight couples and gay couples should be able to enjoy life with the partner that they choose and I totally support that.’

England and Wales first introduced same-sex marriage in March 2014, with Scotland following in December of the same year. It is not available in Northern Ireland.

The post Same-sex marriage finally approved in Isle of Man appeared first on Gay Star News.

www.gaystarnews.com/article/sex-marriage-finally-approved-isle-man/

What’s Your Favorite Broadway Standard? Tell Us And You Might Win A Prize

What’s Your Favorite Broadway Standard? Tell Us And You Might Win A Prize

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People who get to see Broadway musicals are truly the luckiest people in the world. The Great White Way has given us unforgettable memories over the years, from the hopeful dancers belting out “One” in A Chorus Line to Kristen Chenoweth and Idina Menzel delivering the ultimate empowerment anthem “Defying Gravity” from Wicked. While nothing can compare to watching a live musical, the next best thing is surely a compilation of some of the most enduring four decades, such as NOW That’s What I Call Broadway! This essential collection of Broadway’s biggest hits includes definitive performances from Rent, Phantom of the Opera, DreamgirlsEvita and more.

 

Behold the incredible track listing for the album:
1. “Seasons of Love” from Rent featuring the original Broadway cast
2. “Defying Gravity” from Wicked featuring Kristen Chenoweth & Idina Menzel
3. “All That Jazz” from Chicago featuring Chita Rivera and cast
4. “On the Balcony of the Casa Rosada/Don’t Cry For Me Argentina” from Evita featuring Bob Gunton, Patti LuPone & Mandy Patinkin
5. “The Music of the Night” from The Phantom of the Opera featuring Michael Crawford
6. “Memory” from Cats featuring Betty Buckley
7. “I Dreamed A Dream” from Les Misérables featuring Randy Graff
8. “And I’m Telling You I’m Not Going” from Dreamgirls featuring Jennifer Holliday
9. “Ease On Down the Road” from The Wiz featuring Stephanie Mills and cast
10. “Sherry” from Jersey Boys featuring Christian Hoff, Daniel Reichard, J. Robert Spencer and John Lloyd Young
11. “Mama, I’m a Big Girl Now” from Hairspray featuring Laura Bell Bundy, Kerry Butler, Harvey Fierstein, Linda Hart, Jackie Hoffman, Marissa Jaret Winokur and ensemble
12. “Mamma Mia” from Mamma Mia! featuring Siobhan McCarthy, Nicolas Colicos, Paul Clarkson, Hilton McRae and the original London cast
13. “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” from Beautiful: The Carole King Musical featuring Jessie Mueller
14. “Tomorrow” from Annie featuring Andrea McArdle
15. “When I Grow Up” from Matilda featuring Lauren Ward, Bailey Ryon and the original Broadway cast
16. “Circle of Life” from The Lion King featuring Tsidii Le Loka and the original Broadway cast
17. “Finale: Children will Listen” from Into the Woods featuring Bernadette Peters
18. “One” from A Chorus Line featuring the original Broadway cast

 

To qualify for a chance to win a copy, simply tell us in the comments section which song on this album is your favorite. We’ll select three winners at random and notify them by email. The contest ends April 29.

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DVD: “Son Of Saul,” “Hunter,” “India Blues,” & More!

DVD: “Son Of Saul,” “Hunter,” “India Blues,” & More!

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Foreign, queer and prestige titles head up our week’s home entertainment highlights.

Powerful Oscar-winning Foreign Film Son Of Saul sees an Auschwitz prisoner on a desperate mission, while India Blues (above) follows a pair of gay men through the life and death of their relationship. Finally, a gay New York millennial and his gal pal vie for the affections of a sexually ambiguous stranger in Hunter.

Now for trailers and details!

 

Hunter

($24.99 DVD; Ariztical)

One night, 20-something friends Gavin and Amy discover a cute yet unconscious young drifter, Carter, on the former’s NYC doorstep. After inviting the guy in, the pair soon compete for his attentions, especially the love-starved Gavin. What’s the deal with this guy, anyway? Director Ian Samplin was just 23 when he directed this 2013 film, making it a truly a millennial-era LGBT entry.

 

India Blues

($24.99 DVD; I Have My Art)

Originally titled India Blues: Eight Feelings, director George Markakis charts a relationship between a German and Greek using eight different feelings and emotional states as his map, from love to pain to anger to happiness. With a nonlinear structure and avant-garde filmmaking influences like Jean-Luc Godard, plus some hot and reasonably explicit gay sex to boot, this is a departure from your typical boy meets boy flick!

 

Son Of Saul

($34.99 Blu-ray, $30.99 DVD; Sony)

Winner of the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, this harrowing, haunting Hungarian feature is set during 1944 at Auschwitz where prisoner Saul is keeping himself alive by helping to dispose of fellow Jews as member of the Sonderfommando. When he realizes that one of the new arrivals may be his son, so begins an urgent personal mission. Shot in such a way to only expose audiences to what Saul sees himself, this is masterful and intense filmmaking. Extras include a commentary, deleted scene, and Q&A.

ALSO OUT:

91EYvO4uiYL._SX342_Jane Got A Gun

 

Krampus

 

Ride Along 2

 

Hot In Cleveland: Season 6

 

 

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‘Book Ball’ Tops and Bottoms: Power Ranking ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ 08×08 — RECAP

‘Book Ball’ Tops and Bottoms: Power Ranking ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ 08×08 — RECAP

RuPaul's Drag Race Naomi Smalls

Now this is a top four!  I don’t understand folks complaining about this season’s crop of queens. If anything, this might be the most well-balanced group of contestants we’ve seen in a while. The beauty queens can do comedy. The clowns can serve look. They’re savvy. They’re passionate. They take criticism and use it to push themselves. I might have my personal pick to win it all, but I would be happy to see any of these gals snatch that crown.

Or maybe I’m just in a particularly good mood because my least favorite queen is no more.

Tell ‘em boy, bye, and see what happened in our SPOILER-y recap and rankings below.

RuPaul's Drag Race Jerri Blanks

First things first, it’s time to reach out and put your hand up somebody. That’s right, it’s puppet time. The mini-challenge is a classic: Read a fellow queen by dragging out a puppetfied version of your competitor. Bob fired off the most successful one-liners on Kim Chi, but Chi Chi picked up the win with a silly take on Bob’s overwhelming personality. The real story though was how Derrick and Naomi exchanged blows, barely even trying to make jokes, opting instead to trade stinging insults.

ALSO WATCH: Untucked: RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 8 – Episode 8 ‘RuPaul Book Ball’: FULL EPISODE

This week’s main challenge tasked the girls with creating three autobiographical looks. There’s baby drag, which comes along with oversized high heels and jewelry, drag odes to their mothers and an unconventional materials dress using books and paper. Sibling judges Amy and David Sedaris joined the judging panel for the night, calling for a special group lip sync performance to a song all about Jerri Blank. (Move over, Lin-Manuel Miranda!)

Who slayed, who stayed and who sashayed? Let’s dig in to this week’s rankings:

RuPaul's Drag Race Bob the Drag Queen

1. If anything, Bob’s bottom two performance tonight only served to humanize this season’s clear frontrunner. Her march to the crown needed a moment to show how Bob overcomes adversity, especially on such a small critique. Her lip sync was perfect, and it illustrated the difference between performing and performing drag. Every second we saw Bob’s sync, it was entertaining. In fact, the whole time on the runway was a showcase for Bob’s talent. (My favorite moment may have been when she told the judges she considered wearing a wig, “but eh.” Gold.) And for the record, I really don’t think Bob’s makeup is a problem. Is it sensational? Nope. But it’s not going to be a hindrance either.

RuPaul's Drag Race Naomi Smalls

2. The exact order for the remaining queens is really neck and neck. I’d say Naomi is the surest lock for the top 3 given her consistent performance across categories. She can serve look, she can paint for the gods and she can give a competent performance (as long as it’s not of New York).  Off the runway and in interviews, she’s more clever than she initially seemed, and her love for her mother is very endearing. She even came around to rising above and helping Derrick with those brows. (Though, I mean, did she help? Is that what they looked like with her help?)

RuPaul's Drag Race Kim Chi

3. Given Kim Chi’s complicated relationship with her mother, her second look was beautiful and somber and artful in a way we’re not used to seeing on this show. It should go down as one of the series’ most memorable moments. It was a brilliant touch to add a unifying theme to her three looks, comparing her own growth to that of a seedling. Kim Chi’s looks and story this week were stunners, but, at this point, she feels like a surefire winner for Miss Congeniality. If this season follows a similar trajectory to Drag Races past, one of the final big challenges will be a dance-heavy, acting-heavy music video. That’s not in Kim’s favor. I don’t know why Ru seems convinced this show will out Kim to her mother (is her conservative Korean mother really watching that much Logo?), but the one thing that is certain is Kim will be an even bigger star going forward.

RuPaul's Drag Race Chi Chi

4. I’m glad they stopped editing Chi Chi as sort of over the competition. She rose to the challenge throughout last night’s episode. Although I think Bob had the better puppet performance, Chi Chi had some good digs (the best of which was the one that came after she was announced the winner, using her Bob puppet to claim to win everything). Her final book dress was easily her best (and the best on the runway), plus I loved her as Jerri Blank. My gut tells me we won’t be seeing Chi Chi in the top three, but I wouldn’t be mad if she made the upset. Go on, country queen!

RuPaul's Drag Race Derrick Barry

5. Ding dong, the ding-dong’s gone. Derrick finally got the deserved boot. His racially-charged ignorance aside, last night’s episode pushed Derrick’s primary shortcoming in this competition to the forefront. This is not RuPaul’s Female Illusion Race. I mean, those brows. THOSE BROWS. It was the worst paint job in Drag Race herstory. How, HOW did that happen in the top five?! Ridiculous. The lip sync only reinforced what we already knew. Derrick can dance like a pop star, but not as a drag superstar of the world. Don’t serve Britney when I ordered Sylvester, honey. With Naomi, Derrick’s insecurity made her mean-spirited when the shade was supposed to be fun. In the end, Derrick is simply simple, which in so many ways is opposite of the charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent necessary.

How would you rank the queens this week?

The post ‘Book Ball’ Tops and Bottoms: Power Ranking ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ 08×08 — RECAP appeared first on Towleroad.



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