Culture ‘For the first time ever, I worry about doing drag gigs’

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‘For the first time ever, I worry about doing drag gigs’​

In some ways, shows like RuPaul’s Drag Race UKhave made drag more mainstream than ever before, with performers appearing on TV, selling out venues and becoming the faces of fashion brands.

But some drag queens are feeling concerned over their safety in the wake of protests and social media attacks.

“For the first time ever, I do feel worried about doing some gigs,” says former Drag Race UK contestant Crystal. “I worry about protests and who's going to be filming me, and who's going to be trying to twist what I'm doing for an agenda.”

In the US state of Tennessee, lawmakers are trying to enact a law banning “male or female impersonators who provide entertainment” with adult content within 300 metres of public schools, parks or places of worship.

Central to the debate are drag storytelling events, in which drag queens read stories to children. Such events have been subject to protests in both the US and UK. Some argue that these shows contain no content unsuitable for children. Others consider drag performances as suitable only for adults.

What are Drag Queen Story Hours?​

“Drag Story Hour looks exactly like any other [event] you would see at a library,” says Jonathan Hamlit, Drag Story Hour’s executive director in the US. “But the reader may look a little more fabulous than your average librarian.”

The US-based Drag Story Hour favours books in which “all the characters feel empowered and accepted”.

Popular books at the drag storytelling events include Todd Parr’s The Family Book, which celebrates families of all types, and Tyler Feder’s Bodies Are Cool, which publisher Penguin calls “a cheerful love-your-body picture book for preschoolers”.

Drag Story Hour has a curriculum committee that chooses appropriate books. “We want to keep it positive and fun. And have all the characters feel empowered and accepted.”

Drag Race Story Hour UK is run by Sab Samuels, who performs as Aida H Dee and uses they/them pronouns out of drag. Their shows take inspiration from pantomime, a medium in which regularly features men playing larger-than-life “pantomime dames.”

For some, however, the very presence of men dressed as women make these events unsuitable for children. At a protest against the Drag Queen Story Hour UK event at London’s Tate Britain art gallery, a woman told the BBC: “We have concerns because we feel that the costume [drag queen] Aida H Dee wears is sexually inappropriate.

"We're here because we feel that drag queens are great but for people who are over 18. We feel like they are not suitable for anyone who is under 18."

Drag Race UK contestants have taken to social media to share their views. Among those addressing the issue is series four runner up Cheddar Gorgeous, who tweeted: “I think drag is a versatile set form that can be tailored to different audiences. It isn't so different from clowning or Disney princesses.” Series one winner The Vivienne wrote: “Our [the LGBT] community is under attack….again….This time it’s drag…This is madness”

This difference of opinion has led to clashes between supporters of these events and protests.

Jonathan says these protests are becoming increasingly violent in the US. “People are bringing weapons and yelling homophobic and transphobic slurs at children,” he says. “They’re threatening violence and storming events.”

In October 2022, a protest in the US state of Oregon included protestors carrying semi-automatic rifles and smoke bombs. In March, a protest in Ohio in which a man was arrested after drawing a pepper spray gun.

“The hardest part about doing a drag show used to be making sure my [wig] hairline was correct,” Jonathan says. “Now, it’s having a safety plan in case there’s an active shooter.”

‘You get called a groomer or a paedo online constantly’​

This level of violence has not been seen in the UK, but there have also been protests around drag storytelling events. “Last summer we had over 60 events [in the UK],” says Sab. “Only one of them didn't have any aggressive people outside shouting at me.”

Sab also says they have received death threats for their work, claiming to know their full name and address and threatening serious violence if they go near a child again.

Drag queens who have come to the defence of storytelling events have also received abuse online. “Once you dip your toe into that world,” says Crystal, “you get called a groomer or a paedo online constantly.”

The abuse takes its toll, Sab adds. “I definitely have moments where I just crawl into a ball,” they say. But they will not let the protestors stop the shows, and plans to take their storytelling show to the Edinburgh Festival later this year.

For them, drag has always been an act of defiance. They created their drag character after a homophobic attack left them with a dislocated shoulder. “I was thrown down the stairs,” they say, “and the person who did it to me said, ‘This is what happens when you act like a girl.’

“Then I entered a drag queen competition to say, ‘No, this is what happens when I act like a girl.’”

Jonathan also says he will not let the protests stop him. He says that though there have been violent protests, “our support is way greater than the hate.

“It motivates me to keep doing Story Hour for the next generation,” he adds.
 
Most of those pics either don't show anything inappropriate, or aren't drag-related.

Either way it's not 200+ known pedos being allowed to rape children to their hearts content and just moved to a different church if too many parents complain.

After talking with you for a while, I made the determination. You don't really give a fuck about kids. You just want your team to destroy the other team. And you'll throw kids into the woodchipper if it meant you'd win.
 
No, I'd throw kids into the woodchipper if I couldn't abort them as embryos. Duh. How much of a newfag are you?
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@Android raptor
Dude! Take the fucking hint, we are against ALL FORMS OF PAEDOPHILIA.
Just because shitty things happens in a combinations of circumstances doesn't mean you get to derail a thread. Go make your own.
"Pedos bad"
"But what about Christians"
"Pedos bad"
"but what about duck dynasty"
"Pedos. Bad."
"But-"

AFAIC this kind of "trolling" is just as bad as the real thing. Devil's advocate seems to always be an attempt to mask one's true feelings on matters.
 
"Pedos bad"
"But what about Christians"
"Pedos bad"
"but what about duck dynasty"
"Pedos. Bad."
"But-"

AFAIC this kind of "trolling" is just as bad as the real thing. Devil's advocate seems to always be an attempt to mask one's true feelings on matters.
Pedos are bad, and mostly unrelated to drag queens.
 
So we're in agreement that adult entertainers don't need to be around kids, yes?
Yep. Drag queens aren't inherently adult entertainment. Drag can be, and frequently is, perfectly tame (most performances at Pride before dark are completely G-rated, for example. At least that's been my experience).
Ahh so finally mask off. Yes drag queens flashing their feminine penis in front of school children is totally a-ok
If you know about anyone flashing their penis (feminine or otherwise) in front of school children, you need to call the cops
 
f you know about anyone flashing their penis (feminine or otherwise) in front of school children, you need to call the cops
Well, funnily enough, they are being protected by a cultish cabal of people who refuse to give testimony, arrest or prosecute, sound familiar?
 
Yep. Drag queens aren't inherently adult entertainment. Drag can be, and frequently is, perfectly tame (most performances at Pride before dark are completely G-rated, for example. At least that's been my experience).

If you know about anyone flashing their penis (feminine or otherwise) in front of school children, you need to call the cops

See. You don't care. You'll simp for the team, no matter what. Like it's the superbowl.

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Yep. Drag queens aren't inherently adult entertainment. Drag can, and frequently is, perfectly tame (most performances at Pride before dark are completely G-rated, for example. At least that's been my experience).

If you know about anyone flashing their penis (feminine or otherwise) in front of school children, you need to call the cops
Please explain the benefits of exposing children to drag performances. Aside from the fact that you hate children and want them to suffer, I mean. I'll let it slide that historically it's been one of the most vulgar forms of performance—a plebian like me just needs to be enlightened to the clear benefits to children's developing minds—though I have to assume you haven't seen Pink Flamingos.
 
  • Agree
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