Sherry Pie plus 5 more outrageous off-screen scandals involving “Drag Race” stars

Sherry Pie plus 5 more outrageous off-screen scandals involving “Drag Race” stars

Joey Gugliemelli, a.k.a. Sherry Pie, currently appears on Season 12 of RuPaul’s Drag Race. Last week, he was accused of catfishing multiple young men by pretending to be a casting director and then tricking them into sending him degrading videos of themselves.

In response to the allegations, Gugliemelli issued an apology, saying he was “horribly embarrassed” and “disgusted” with himself for what he had done.

“I know that the pain and hurt that I have caused will never go away and I know that what I did was wrong and truly cruel,” he wrote.

Related: We investigated the sexual misconduct of Sherry Pie. What we found was a decade of lies & video.

But the apology wasn’t enough for the show to announce Sherry Pie had been officially disqualified from the competition.

“In light of recent developments and Sherry Pie’s statement, Sherry Pie has been disqualified from RuPaul’s Drag Race,” a statement read. “Sherry will not appear in the grand finale scheduled to be filmed later this spring.”

Of course, this is hardly the first time a Drag Race contestant has been wrapped up in some sort of outrageous real-life drama.

Scroll down for 5 more queens who are no strangers to off-screen scandal…

Tyra Sanchez

The Season 2 winner suffered serious damage to her reputation when she insinuated that she was plotting a terrorist attack on the 2018 DragCon event in Los Angeles.

“Fair warning:” Sanchez, a.k.a. James William Ross IV, wrote in a since-deleted tweet, “DO NOT attend RuPaul’s DragCon on May 12, 2018. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

After sufficiently freaking everyone out, Sanchez posted a lengthy apology on social media, along with an explanation for some of her past hot-tempered behavior: “I was on an extreme roller coaster of emotions. So many ups and too many downs. Exhausted, I was just ready to get off the ride.”

Related: Tyra Sanchez posts cryptic threat against RuPaul’s DragCon and fans are NOT having it

Mimi Imfurst

The Season 3 contestant admitted to repeatedly engaging men in unwanted sexual banter on Facebook Messenger.

It all started when two local up-and-coming Philly drag queens, Kyle Ayotte and Ethan Hunter Raysor, accused Braden Chapman, a.k.a. Mimi Imfurst, of incessant unwanted sexual chatting. They claimed there were more victims but that they feared being “blacklisted” by the city’s most famous drag queen if they dared to speak up.

In response, Chapman told Philidelphia that he “deeply regreted” his “ongoing late-night sexual conversations that involved in-depth and often exaggerated cyber role play that although was welcomed by some has made others uncomfortable and used.”

Related: ‘Drag Race’ contestant accused of online sexual harassment, admits wrongdoing

Robbie Turner

The Season 8 alum made headlines when she claimed to have been in a fatal Uber crash on her way home from Queer/Bar on Capitol Hill.

In a series of tweets, Turner, a.k.a. Jeremy Baird, said “Last night on my way home my Uber was struck by a drunk driver. I closed my eyes briefly & it happened,” and “My driver did not survive.”

Turns out, the whole thing was fake.

Baird later claimed someone spiked his drink at the bar causing him to slip in the shower. After hitting his head he had “a very vivid and ridiculous dream” which he misinterpreted as being “100 percent real.”

After undergoing a a psych evaluation and speaking to a crisis counselor, Baird said he was “horrified” by the whole thing and apologized for the snafu.

Related: Robbie Turner breaks her silence about that “fatal Uber crash” and… wow.

Jasmine Masters

The Season 4 all-star was accused of biting the hand that feeds her when she posted a video to her YouTube channel declaring “RuPaul’s Drag Race has f*cked up drag!”

Masters, a.k.a. Martell Robinson, said the only reason she agreed to be on the show was for a “pay raise” because she was sick of seeing bad queens come in from out of town and make more money than her.

“Half ya’ll asses can’t perform!” she ranted. “Bitches are wearing panties and bras on stage and thinking they’re fucking sickening, the crowd think they’re sickening because they’ve been on this show. I’m not knocking how people want to express themselves in drag, but, honey, that’s not drag!”

Related: Jasmine Masters: “‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ F*cked Up Drag”

Tatianna

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Star Tatianna Arrested for Disorderly Conduct t.co/YhdKHR2cwc

— TMZ (@TMZ) October 14, 2019

The All-Stars Season 2 star was arrested in Atlanta for disorderly conduct after she refused to enter an Atlanta nightclub through the appropriate door.

According to TMZ, Tatianna allegedly tried using employees-only back door at a nightclub after taking a picture with one of the employees. When the guy told her she had to use the front entrance, she went through the back door anyway. Police were called and the defiant queen was taken away in handcuffs.

“It was a dumb situation that I wish didn’t happen but sh*t happens and people make mistakes,” Tatianna, a.k.a. Joey Santolini, said afterwards. There was no violence or ridiculousness.”

As for the widely-circulated mugshot, Santolini had just one regret: “Wish I would have just smiled.”

Related: Tatianna arrested for disorderly conduct: ‘Sh*t happens’

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This Coronavirus Is Unlike Anything in Our Lifetime — Here’s Why We Need to Stop Comparing It to the Flu

This Coronavirus Is Unlike Anything in Our Lifetime — Here’s Why We Need to Stop Comparing It to the Flu

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

As a longtime health care reporter, the unfolding coronavirus pandemic represents everything I’ve read about — from the early days of epidemiology to the staggering toll of the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic — but had not covered in my lifetime.

And still, I have been caught off guard by the pushback from top elected officials and even some friends and acquaintances who keep comparing it to the flu.

“So last year 37,000 Americans died from the common Flu,” President Donald Trump wrote on Twitter on March 9. “It averages between 27,000 and 70,000 per year. Nothing is shut down, life & the economy go on. At this moment there are 546 confirmed cases of CoronaVirus, with 22 deaths. Think about that!”

By Friday, Trump had declared coronavirus a national emergency, freeing up resources and removing hurdles for a faster response.

In the meantime, not one public health expert I trust — not one — has said this flu comparison is valid or that we’re overdoing it. Every single one, from former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb to Harvard professor Ashish Jha, has said we’re not doing enough, that this is far more serious than it is being taken.

Here’s why that is:

This is far deadlier than the flu.

As Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and others have said, COVID-19 is deadlier than the flu. It’s deadlier for young adults. It’s deadlier for older adults. In China, early data shows that it was 10 times deadlier. This chart from Business Insider compares U.S. flu deaths to deaths in China from COVID-19.

The flu kills less than 1% of infected people who are over age 65. By comparison, in China, COVID-19 killed 8% of those infected who were 70-79 and almost 15% of those infected who were age 80 or older. That’s a staggering difference.

Even for younger people, the difference was striking. Flu killed .02% of infected patients age 18-49. It’s 10 times that for COVID-19.

In other countries, such as South Korea, the death rate has been far lower.

But if 1 in 12 people age 70-79 who get the virus and 1 in 7 people age 80 or older who get the virus die, and the virus spreads to 20%, 40% or 70% of the population, we’re talking massive death tolls, the likes of which we have never seen before in our lives.

“I mean, people always say, well, the flu does this, the flu does that,” Fauci said Wednesday during congressional testimony. “The flu has a mortality of 0.1%. This has a mortality rate of 10 times that. That’s the reason I want to emphasize we have to stay ahead of the game in preventing this.”

Our health care system doesn’t have the capacity to deal with this.

Epidemiological experts keep talking about the need to “flatten the curve.” What they mean by that is that we need to slow the speed at which new cases are reported. We may not be able to stop the spread of the coronavirus, but we have to try to manage it. If 1,000 new cases happen over a month instead of a week, the health care system is more able to handle them.

Here’s why this is a worry: Overall, our hospitals have fewer beds than other developed countries, according to recent data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. The United States had 2.8 beds per 1,000 residents. By comparison, Germany had 8 beds and China 4.3 per 1,000.

The United States looks better when it comes to intensive care beds, but there’s tremendous variation between regions and states. If we experience what parts of China and Italy saw, we won’t have anywhere for sick patients to go. We will quickly run out of capacity.

Even if we have the capacity, we may not have enough supplies.

In a crisis moment, supplies like ventilators and N95 face masks will be key. But as National Geographic and other media have reported, the United States has only a fraction of the medical supplies it needs.

“Three hundred million respirators and face masks. That’s what the United States needs as soon as possible to protect health workers against the coronavirus threat. But the nation’s emergency stockpile has less than 15 percent of these supplies,” the magazine reported.

Others have reported shortfalls as well, and ProPublica has been hearing from health care professionals across the country who say their own institutions are running short of supplies. (Share your story here.)

U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams tweeted at the end of February, “Seriously people- STOP BUYING MASKS! They are NOT effective in preventing general public from catching #Coronavirus, but if healthcare providers can’t get them to care for sick patients, it puts them and our communities at risk!”

Another challenge: Hospital staff have been exposed too.

And if that weren’t enough, there’s another problem. Health care workers who have been exposed to the virus are now quarantining themselves, further reducing available staff at hospitals. Kaiser Health News reported on the effects of this:

“In Vacaville, California, alone, one case — the first documented instance of community transmission in the U.S. — left more than 200 hospital workers under quarantine and unable to work for weeks.

“Across California, dozens more health care workers have been ordered home because of possible contagion in response to more than 80 confirmed cases as of Sunday afternoon. In Kirkland, Washington, more than a quarter of the city’s fire department was quarantined after exposure to a handful of infected patients at the Life Care Center nursing home.”

This week, Banner Health in Colorado informed employees that a co-worker is among those with the coronavirus, The Colorado Sun reported. “People who came into prolonged, close contact with the woman in a Banner Health emergency room are being notified and asked to home-quarantine for 14 days, according to a source close to the investigation who spoke to The Sun on the condition of anonymity.”

And my ProPublica colleagues reported Friday how some EMS workers are also being quarantined because of exposure. (It didn’t help, of course, that the EMS system was slow to get up to speed on the threat.)

More than that, many health care workers have children and as schools begin to close, they have to figure out how to care for their own families.

People in rural areas will have little care nearby should they be affected by COVID-19.

Rural areas in the U.S. are losing their hospitals entirely, and residents are having to travel hours for care. According to the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 126 rural hospitals have closed since 2010, including six so far this year. That’s about 6%.

An analysis by the Chartis Center for Rural Health and iVantage Health Analytics this year found that about a quarter of the nation’s 1,844 open rural hospitals are vulnerable.

As The Washington Post described it last year, “Hospitals like Fairfax Community [in Oklahoma] treat patients that are on average six years older and 40 percent poorer than those in urban hospitals, which means rural hospitals have suffered disproportionately from government cuts to Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement rates. They also treat a higher percentage of uninsured patients, resulting in unpaid bills and rising debts.

“A record 46 percent of rural hospitals lost money last year. More than 400 are classified by health officials as being at ‘high risk of imminent failure.’ Hundreds more have cut services or turned over control to outside ownership groups in an attempt to stave off closure.”

What I’m doing.

This is serious, and I’m making changes to the way I live and work. I’m working from home, trying to get enough sleep and avoiding crowds of any kind. And watching events unfold in what I hope is a once-in-a-lifetime event.

We’re Still Reporting. Tell Us More About Coronavirus.

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This Coronavirus Is Unlike Anything in Our Lifetime — Here’s Why We Need to Stop Comparing It to the Flu

Apple Closing All Stores Outside Greater China Until March 27 Due to Coronavirus

Apple Closing All Stores Outside Greater China Until March 27 Due to Coronavirus

Apple CEO Tim Cook announced late Friday that the company would be closing all stores outside greater China until March 27 in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

In our workplaces and communities, we must do all we can to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Apple will be temporarily closing all stores outside of Greater China until March 27 and committing $15M to help with worldwide recovery. t.co/ArdMA43cFJ

— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) March 14, 2020

Wrote Cook in a statement: “Apple’s committed donations to the global COVID-19 response — both to help treat those who are sick and to help lessen the economic and community impacts of the pandemic — today reached $15 million worldwide. We’re also announcing that we are matching our employee donations two-to-one to support COVID-19 response efforts locally, nationally and internationally.  I want to recognize Apple’s family in Greater China. Though the rate of infections has dramatically declined, we know COVID-19’s effects are still being strongly felt. I want to express my deep gratitude to our team in China for their determination and spirit. As of today, all of our stores in Greater China have reopened. I also want to thank our operations team and partners for their remarkable efforts to restore our supply chain. What we’ve learned together has helped us all.”

“One of those lessons is that the most effective way to minimize risk of the virus’s transmission is to reduce density and maximize social distance,” Cook added. “As rates of new infections continue to grow in other places, we’re taking additional steps to protect our team members and customers.We will be closing all of our retail stores outside of Greater China until March 27. We are committed to providing exceptional service to our customers. Our online stores are open at www.apple.com, or you can download the Apple Store app on the App Store.”

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Apple Closing All Stores Outside Greater China Until March 27 Due to Coronavirus