Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

  • Written by Scott McKinnon, Vice-Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Wollongong

For a reality TV show about a queer subculture, RuPaul’s Drag Race has achieved extraordinary success. In the show, which winds up another series this Friday, drag queens compete to be named “America’s Next Drag Superstar”. Across 13 seasons (including three of RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars) it has graduated from niche programming on the LGBT cable station Logo to a mainstream, award-winning hit on the widely viewed VH1. In Australia, the show streams on Stan and is often highlighted as a drawcard in its ad campaigns.

The show’s wit and glamour go some way to explaining this success. Just as important, however, is the way in which Drag Race acts as a small-screen reflection of big issues happening in the wider world.

Race, sex and religion are all front and centre. And the show is a real-time representation of current struggles over gender performance and identity. Yet paradoxically, Drag Race is both an agent and subject of this disruptive gender moment. Gender discourse has changed greatly even since the show’s first episode screened in 2009, with words and phrases like “genderqueer”, “non-binary”, “genderfluid” and “post-gender” gaining currency as ways to describe lives unconstrained by strict definitions of male and female.

Drag Race greets these changes as both the cool, queer kid, gloriously messing with the very idea of gender, and an old fogey, somewhat startled and just trying to keep up. It offers both celebratory affirmation of lives beyond the binary and a somewhat reticent clinging to old norms.

The queens of season ten.

What gender should a drag queen be?

In recent months, Drag Race’s difficulties negotiating the gender binary have been revealed in fresh controversies. In an interview earlier this year, the show’s host RuPaul Charles suggested that transgender queens who have undergone gender affirming surgery might not be welcome as competitors. He later tweeted, “You can take performance enhancing drugs and still be an athlete, just not in the Olympics.”

I am tempted to write that this position represents a “traditional” view of drag in which a man pretends to be a woman (or vice versa, in the case of drag kings), but links between drag and trans cultures have their own long history. Drag Race often references the iconic documentary Paris is Burning, which explored the African-American and Latinx drag balls of 1980s New York featuring many queens who were trans women. In Australia some of our greatest drag stars – most famously, Carlotta – are also trans.

Read more: RuPaul's 'tranny' debate: the limits and power of language

Indeed, two Drag Race competitors – Peppermint and Monica Beverly Hillz – have come out as transgender while on the show and have been supported for doing so. More have come out as trans, genderqueer or gender non-binary since competing. In this light, RuPaul’s uncertainty about transgender queens is surprising. But much like the broader society it satirises, Drag Race isn’t yet sure how to make sense of a world that isn’t structured around male and female.

Peppermint, from season nine, discusses coming out as trans as a drag queen.

Celebrating the feminine, embracing the masculine

Drag Race exposes the homophobia and transphobia that are a part of the queens’ daily life. Family rejection, HIV diagnoses, violent abuse, poor mental health and addiction are among the many challenges described by the show’s stars in moments of personal disclosure.

For all its success in advocating for visibility, safety and equality for gender non-conforming people, however, Drag Race also valorises a specific form of masculinity.

If the queens are worshipped for their “charisma, uniqueness, nerve and talent”, the objects of sexual desire on the show are the “pit crew” – a group of handsome, muscular and six-packed men only ever seen wearing skimpy underwear, who serve as stage hands and occasional participants in the queens’ competitive challenges.

RuPaul's Drag Race is still figuring out how to handle gender and race The pit crew on RuPaul’s Drag Race. IMDB

We might find some feminist victory in the positioning of men as the near-naked objects on display, but there is also a suggestion that the queens are more likely to desire these particular masculine figures than they are each other.

In other words, the queens are positioned as effeminate men who desire the masculine, rather than as queer individuals whose sexual desires may well include their femme peers.

Ru’s legacy

RuPaul has been the world’s most famous drag queen since his song Supermodel (You Better Work) became an unlikely global hit in 1993. After beginning his career in a 1980s subculture of parties, performance and punk, the self-described “motherfucking marketing genius” now in his fifties is a recording artist, podcaster, shoe designer, author and two-time Emmy winning TV show host.

RuPaul labels Drag Race his “legacy” and an admirable part of his project is ensuring that queens who normally struggle to get by on tips from nightclub gigs can now make a very good living indeed. Everything on Drag Race is branded and the show’s host urges his queens to develop brands of their own. They need something to sell at merchandise stands and RuPaul’s Drag Con™ festivals.

Still, in Drag Race, RuPaul combines activist and capitalist purposes that don’t always fit neatly together. This season, contestant The Vixen has powerfully ignited a discussion about the impacts of racism within the gay community, the broader society and on Drag Race itself. In the words of American writer John Paul Brammer, “Ru’s American ‘by your bootstraps’ ethic paired with his Buddhist passivity to earthly affairs kept him from fully engaging with The Vixen’s argument, which included a vital analysis of race.”

The Vixen on being portrayed as an “angry black woman”

RuPaul has created a show that joyfully reveals queer lives with humour, wit and a political eye. Drag Race celebrates the idea of breaking gender boundaries and offers welcome representation for every sissy kid growing up with no desire to act like a proper bloke.

But having launched the careers of many younger queens, RuPaul and his show are now confronted with how to adapt to, represent or confront new ideas about race and gender the kids are bringing to his show.

Drag Race hasn’t yet worked out what to do if the man in the dress reveals she has always been a woman; or is both male and female; or doesn’t have a gender at all. For now, in the Drag Race world, once the frock comes off and the make-up remover is applied, everything returns to “normal”.

RuPaul’s Drag Race streams in Australia on Stan.

Authors: Scott McKinnon, Vice-Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of Wollongong

Read more http://theconversation.com/rupauls-drag-race-is-still-figuring-out-how-to-handle-gender-and-race-96711

Business News

Robot Trading and Automation: Does Automated Trading Really Work?

In today’s fast-moving financial markets, many new and experienced traders wonder whether automated trading systems — often called trading robots, expert advisors (EAs), or algorithmic bots — can real...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Physical retail roars back: Christmas 2025 expected to be the biggest in years

Physical retail is back and it’s booming. Shopping centres across Australia are preparing for one of the biggest Christmas and Boxing Day sale seasons on record, driven by strong consumer confidence...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Groundbreaking investment positions Agile Energy to slash power costs for Australian businesses and accelerate Australia’s rise as a green economic powerhouse

Agile Energy is now positioned to play a defining role in reducing energy costs for Australian businesses and fast-tracking the nation’s transformation into a globally competitive green economic pow...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Speed Dating For Business
hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink สล็อตเว็บตรงbets10คลิปหลุดไทยmilanobetbettiltStreameastjojobetKalebetGalabetfixbetaviator gamesetrabettimebettimebettimebetbahisoistanbul escort telegramcasibomcasibomcasibomcrown155hb88super96betsmovecasibomstreameast한국야동av한글자막casibom girişสล็อตpornopadişahbetBetigmacasibomBetigmaBetlora girişgiftcardmall/mygiftgaziantep escortspin2uneoaus96Galabetartemisbetmarsbahisgalabet girişgooglebets10ffpokiespusulabetbest australia online casino 2026best payid casino australiajojobet 1115jojobetzbahismegapari girişmatbet girişmostbetgalabetdaftar situs judi slot gacor hb88 indonesiajojobet 1114mostbetmostbetgalabettlcasinobahis siteleri 2025matbet girişMalware downloadcasinowon girişkavbetjojobetwww.giftcardmall.com/mygiftjojobetgrandpashabetcasibomcasibom girişgiftcardmall/mygiftsadfasdfsdfasdasdasdasdmeritkinggalabetjojobetroyalbet girişpin up azSlot Heart Casinocasinomedklarna.sejojobet 1115Casibomwww.mcgift.giftcardmall.com balancewww.mcgift.giftcardmall.com balancegiftcardmall/mygiftwww.giftcardmall.com/mygift activatetm menards loginsekabetartemisbetnerobetbetasusstake payid casino australiabest payid casino in australiajojobetcanlı maç izlebetpashttps://vozolturkiyedistributoru.com/casibomcasibomlunabetzbahis güncel adresfixbetzbahis girişjojobetcasibomwolf winnerWolf Winnercasibom girişdeneme bonusu veren sitelerhazbetjojobetjojobetbetpas girişmeritkingssitus slot gacorGalabetgoogle hit botuCasibomdizipalmarsbahisgrandpashabetkulisbetkulisbetbets10grandpashabetgalabetGanobetonwin girişjojobetbetgit canlı destekgalabetmatbetartemisbetbetasusjojobetmeritkingjojobetCasino WinnitajojobetMarsbahisizmir escort telegramMeritkingeSIM الجزائرmarsbahiscasibomjojobet girişcasibomjojobetbets10giftcardmall/mygiftbetlikedeneme bonusu veren sitelercasibom güncel girişholiganbet girişcasibombets10jojobetGalabetcasinolevantsekabet girişmarsbahismeritkingbets10extrabetholiganbetpaşacasinotaraftarium24jojobet girişjojobetcasibomjojobetsahabetmatbetholiganbet 1182bets10jojobetbetnanolocabetmatbetcasibomwbahispulibetjojobetjojobet girişvdcasino