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I will never stop laughing at the absolute earth-shattering audacity of these morons, the way they blab to some hot chick/twink they took on one or two dinner dates "oh yeah I'm breakin the law, federal law, state law, local law, all the laws all the time, never gonna get caught cause I am so fucking smart lmao."
Would the new Gender Critical board be good? It kinda sucks this is hidden from sight by being in AT.Hope this isn't a stupid question, but should this thread be moved to the "lolcow general" space?
Despite that board being for girls and many kiwis having to essentially post in drag by participating, or maybe because of that, this seems most appropriate.Would the new Gender Critical board be good? It kinda sucks this is hidden from sight by being in AT.
I don't wanna get cooties. I think you'll see a lot more female kiwis defending these fucks if it's moved there.Despite that board being for girls and many kiwis having to essentially post in drag by participating, or maybe because of that, this seems most appropriate.
In a new video released by Project Veritas on Tuesday, the Assistant Principle of Cos Cob Elementary School in Connecticut was captured boasting about how he doesn’t hire Catholic teachers, and how the teachers at the school sneak liberal ways of thinking into their teaching methods.
“You’re teaching them how to think. That’s it. It doesn’t matter what they think about. If they think about it in a logical, progressive way, that becomes their habit,” Jeremy Boland was captured saying in an undercover conversation with a Project Veritas Journalist.
“So, you kind of like, gear them to think in a more liberal way?” the Project Veritas journalist asked.
Boland replied with a yes, before later adding, “believe it or not, the open-minded, more progressive teachers are actually more savvy about delivering a Democratic message without really ever having to mention their politics.”
“It’s subtly. They’ll never say, ‘oh, this is a liberal or a Democratic way of doing this.’ They’ll just make that the norm. And this is how we handle things, it’s subtle,” he added.
“And that’s how you get away with it?” the journalist asked.
“That’s how you get away with it,” Boland conformed.
The journalist continued on to question how Boland and the school could do this without the parents finding out.
“They can find out, so long as you never mention the politics of it,” Boland replied.
“And then later down the line they’re gonna vote Democrat and you will have done a great service to our country,” the journalist commented.
Boland is seen nodding in agreement before adding, “I hope.”
A second portion of the undercover video revealed that Boland and the school discriminates against hires that may be older, conservative leaning, or Catholic.
“If people knew that you, like, didn’t hire conservatives though, do you think they would be pissed?” the journalist asked.
“I’m not allowed to ask their political leanings and they’re not allowed to ask me. So it just comes down to the questions,” Boland stated.
“One of the questions that I might start including is something about transgender students, students that are — identify — what is it, non-binary?
Giving a theoretical, conservative answer to the question, Boland said, “Well, I don’t think kids have enough knowledge to make that decision [gender identity] for themself.”
Boland snapped his fingers and said in regards to that potential new hire, “You’re out, you’re done.”
“I need younger [teachers]… but if they’re older, I’m not allowed to do that. I can’t tell them, ‘I’m not interviewing you because you’re older.’ I just don’t interview them,” said Boland.
“For one position, I think we had 30 applicants. So out of all those applicants, I don’t think I interviewed anybody over the [age] of 30,” Boland said. Sometimes the older you get, the more set in your ways, the more conservative you get.
“The conservative [teacher], who is stuck in her ways. I’ll never be able to fire her, and I’ll never be able to change her. So I make an impact with the next teacher I hire,” Boland said.
“So have you found, like, that certain religions tend to be more right-wing?” the journalist asked.
“Almost all of them,” Boland said, before adding “I’m probably not a huge expert on religion but protestants in this area are probably the most liberal, but if they’re Catholic, it’s unbelievable.”
“If someone is raised hardcore Catholic, it’s like, they’re brainwashed — you can never change their mindset,” Boland said.
When asked by the Project Veritas journalist what he does if he finds out that the candidate is Catholic, Boland responded simply, “you don’t hire them.”
According to Connecticut Law section 46A-60B1, it is illegal for employers “to refuse to hire or employ or to bar or to discharge from employment any individual or to discriminate against such individual in compensation or in terms, conditions or privileges of employment because of the individual’s race, color, religious creed, age, sex, gender identity or expression, marital status, national origin, ancestry, present or past history of mental disability, intellectual disability, learning disability, physical disability, including, but not limited to, blindness or status as a veteran.”
Despite that board being for girls and many kiwis having to essentially post in drag by participating, or maybe because of that, this seems most appropriate.
How about both?Drag queen reacts to antifa showing up with guns and weapons outside a drag event.
View attachment 3656671
Sounds like he's just doing his part to protect kids from actual groomers/pedos.
uh oh. i was wondering what his intentions were but it seems like this might be it.He is originally a PE teacher:
Sounds like he's just doing his part to protect kids from actual groomers/pedos.
Update:
An assistant principal in Greenwich is on administrative leave after he claimed to avoid hiring conservatives and Roman Catholics in a secretly-recorded video.
...
In a statement, Greenwich Public Schools Superintendent Dr. Toni Jones said:
“Late last evening, we were made aware of a video that had gone viral with a current administrator from Cos Cob School. We intend to do a full investigation and until that time, we will not make any public statements. We ask that you respect the investigation process during this time.
We do not, however, support any opinions that promote discriminatory hiring practices based on race, religion, gender, or age in any way, and we want to remind our entire community that our curriculum policies and procedures are strictly enforced by our Board.”
...
One former school board member says it's the right move.
"It's not just a rogue administrator,” said Peter Sherr, who spent a dozen years on the board. “If you're around Greenwich Public Schools, you know that this culture exists inside the system."
The video is already turning into a political issue too. Leora Levy, the GOP candidate for U.S. Senate, is holding an event outside the school this evening.
On the Democrats’ side, Gov. Ned Lamont also denounced what he saw in the clip.
“Discrimination of any kind has no place in Connecticut, especially in our public schools. This is not aligned with our Connecticut values,” he said. “The Connecticut State Department of Education is aware of the incident, has been in contact with Greenwich Public School administrators, and is monitoring the situation’s progress.”
That's going to get interesting -- the poster says "Current & Former BYU Students" are the drag queens. Given this is in UT, BYU is almost certainly Brigham Young University, which is a very conservative Mormon uni with an infamously strict student code of conduct. I'm pretty sure drag is haram by their rules.
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How these diverse queens are changing Utah’s drag scene
The collective of Artel Talent produces drag shows that highlight inclusivity.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) The Artel Talent group gathers for a promotional photo shoot at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake on Saturday, May 7, 2022. From left are Tara Lipsyncki, Edgy, London Skies, Ana Lee Kage, Poppycock Visqueen, Sophia Azul and Lilia Maughn.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) The Artel Talent group gathers for a promotional photo shoot at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake on Saturday, May 7, 2022. From left are Tara Lipsyncki, Edgy, London Skies, Ana Lee Kage, Poppycock Visqueen, Sophia Azul and Lilia Maughn.
By Palak Jayswal
| June 1, 2022, 6:44 a.m.
The stage at South Salt Lake’s Dented Brick Distillery is an airy space decorated with exposed barrels of spirits — and its muted grays and tans are no match for the Technicolor wonders about to step into the light.
Backstage, one performer, dressed in a full bodysuit that’s yellow speckled with blue, white and pink paint, is trying to decide on what shoes to wear. The trailing skirt/cape of the outfit will show them off. There are two choices: one boot has laces, the other is entirely leather. They both go up to the knee.
The performer, Tara Lipsyncki, asks one of their colleagues which one she should pick.
Ana Lee Kage, who’s wearing a long red sequined dress, gives an answer that aligns with a larger theme within the group: “Go with what makes you most comfortable.”
Around the area, there are other performers, each supporting their own, carefully curated looks. There’s London Skies, dressed in a newspaper print outfit she created from leggings at Walmart. Poppycock Visqueen is a vision in lilac. Sophia Azul has blue hair, but dons a wig with a lime green and black fur hat. Edgy sports a wig so voluminous it adds six inches to her height before cascading beyond her shoulders. Finally, there’s Lilia Maughn, with winged eyeliner applied with the precision of an architect’s pencil.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Poppycock Visqueen joins other members of the Alteltalent Group for a promotional photo shoot at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake as they prepare for upcoming Utah Pride Week shows on Saturday, May 6, 2022.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Poppycock Visqueen joins other members of the Alteltalent Group for a promotional photo shoot at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake as they prepare for upcoming Utah Pride Week shows on Saturday, May 6, 2022.
These performers are drag queens from Artel Talent, a collective that hosts and books drag shows across the state, and they’re gathered together for a promotional photoshoot. The makeshift dressing room is full of glitter, sequins, feathers, exquisitely executed makeup. There’s a yellow wig on the table. A box of acrylic nails, too.
There’s more to this group, though, than glitz and glam.
In the collective’s first year, they have performed more than 200 shows, with 100 different performers, at more than a dozen venues. It’s one of the few drag groups in Utah with an all-ages show. They bill themselves as “Utah’s largest and most diverse LGBTQIA+ professional performance collective.”
Lipsyncki, who is not only a performer but Artel’s president, said, “we kind of just grew from the little engine that could in Park City to what we are now: Big, amazing, gorgeous performers you see in front of you today.”
Fighting misconceptions
Utah, in spite of its conservative reputation, has a flourishing drag scene; there’s even a Yelp page dedicated to the top 10 best shows in Salt Lake City.
But, the queens at Artel say, there are misconceptions about the art form..
“Everybody has the idea in their head that the generic drag queen is a cisgender man in a wig,” London Skies said. “When they come across non-binary people or transgender entertainers, they assume [this], and that they can make the same comments.”
The queens Artel books, and the types of shows the company performs, are aimed at tearing down those misconceptions. Half of Artel’s performers are people of color, and at least 30% are trans, nonbinary or gender nonconforming.
Several of Artel’s queens have been involved with other shows in Utah — and they said they have had negative experiences, such as being cut because they don’t fit a certain mold, or not getting paid properly.
Being a drag performer sometimes becomes a game of how to fit into a particular box. For example, Poppycock Visqueen is an AFAB (assigned female at birth) queen, and there have been people who asked her if what she does is really drag — because it doesn’t fit into the traditional notion of who a drag queen is.
Kage said that “drag is not a gay art, it’s a queer art.”
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Ana Lee Kage talks about her craft alongside other members of the Artel Talent group during a get-together at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake on Saturday, May 6, 2022.
Diversity in drag
Within Utah’s drag scene, diversity is an issue — one that Lipsyncki took pains to address when starting the collective.
“When people are pushed out because they don’t fit a mold, which has happened here, and it’s continually happening here in Salt Lake City in the drag game, you’re not getting booked,” Lipsyncki said.
She said she aimed to be an ally in creating a safe space for POC queens, and asked Kage, Edgy and Lilia Maughn to help craft shows where they could be the focus.
The results were the shows “Gender…Where?,’ which was performed by an entirely trans cast, and “Melanin Rouge,” with a cast of queens of color.
Talking about the “Gender … Where?” show, Skies said that “through drag, I was able to understand my own gender identity and learn more about myself and the people in my community.”
Azul, a Latina drag queen, said “Melanin Rouge” allowed her to bring out her “Latina-ness,” adding that “I love to be that stepping stone for everyone that can see a brown girl in the stage and be like, ‘I can be like her and dreams do come true.’”
“You need to see A to Z, you need to see all the colors because that’s what the community is about,” Skies said. “Every individual is important, and if you have the guts enough to get up on stage and do what you do, it deserves to be f---ing seen.”
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Sophia Azul, left, gets help with her wig from Edgy as they prepare for a promotional photo shoot for the Arteltalent group on Saturday, May 7, 2022.
The art of drag
How do drag queens prepare to perform? That depends on the queen, and on the show.
Each show is different, and requires a different level of preparation. “It’s like a whole new character,” Kage said.
Lipsyncki said that when they are asked to perform a new show, the first question they ask the venue manager is what rating they want. They can go from tame to raunchy — and even have put on an all-ages show, “Spill the Tea,” where they had a 3-year-old in the audience.
It’s nice, the collective members say, to offer a show that queer youth can attend, because it gives those kids someone to look up to.
For some queens, the audience’s energy is a key factor. Some members of the collective say they have seen Republican senators (none of them from Utah) in the audience, as well as famous drag queens like Tina Burner (an alum of “RuPaul’s Drag Race”).
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tara Lipsyncki, one of the founders of Alteltalent Group joins other members of the group for a discussion about their their craft, challenges and common misconceptions on Saturday, May 6, 2022, at Dented Brick Distillery.
When it comes to audiences, the queens also have to consider their personal safety — and the possibility of heckling that can turn into hate crimes.
“People like drag shows in bars and places like that. They don’t realize what they’re actually doing. … They don’t think about the performers,” Skies said — which can mean inadequate dressing rooms. As a transgender performer, Skies said she always covers her bases, especially around “cisgender, white heteronormative people who have never gone to a show.”
A lot of the queens also make their own costumes, like Kage, who makes dresses out of unconventional materials like paper or tape.
“If you’re not a sewing queen, then it’s fine to be a stone queen,” Azul said, referring to performers who add rhinestones to their outfits. Azul said. “You have to give it your 100%, even if you’re sweating, even if your eyeliner is falling off, you’re giving them a show to be like, ‘Oh, okay, this is what I came for.’”
A drag performance incorporates music, dance and loads of personality — all combining into what the queens say is the best part of drag: The storytelling.
What matters most in drag, Visqueen said, is “that counterculture aspect of: It’s you, not everyone else, and it’s the ownership of queerdom in that way.”
That ownership is on display at Dented Brick Distillery on this particular Saturday night. The queens are being photographed among the distilling vats — which are visible through a window at the entrance.
A few patrons get a glimpse of the photo shoot — and see seven drag queens in full costume.
They are free, confident, powerful. They are inviting anyone who wants to visit, to learn about the world of Utah drag. Skies said anyone who accepts the invitation will come out the better for it.
“Drag heals,” Skies said. “It’s very therapeutic.”
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) London Skies poses for a portrait as members of the group Artel Talent update their promotional head shots at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake in anticipation of Utah Pride Week on Saturday, May 6, 2022.
Where to see Artel’s drag queens
Here are the details for Artel Talent’s regularly scheduled drag shows.
• Sunday Service • The Cabin, 427 Main, Park City, Sundays at 11 a.m. ; 21+ show.
• Spill the Tea • Tea Zaanti, 1944 S. 1100 East, Salt Lake City, third Friday of the month, 7 p.m.; all-ages show.
• The Playground* • Club Verse, 609 S. State St., Thursday nights; 21+ show.
• Melanin Rouge* • Club Verse, 609 S. State St., third Friday of every month at midnight, starting in July; 21+ show, featuring queens of color.
• Gender…Where?* • Club Verse, 609 S. State St., first Friday of every month at midnight ; 21+ show, featuring an all-trans cast.
• Besties Who Brunch • Redemption Bar & Grill, 3517 Maradona Dr., Herriman; once every two months (dates TBD); 21+ show.
(A new brunch show is set to debut, June 5, at Flanker Kitchen + Sporting Club, 6 N. Rio Grande St., Salt Lake City — in the Gateway. Details to be announced.)
*Schedules for Verse shows are tentative, and subject to change.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) The Artel Talent group gathers for a promotional photo shoot at Dented Brick Distillery in South Salt Lake on Saturday, May 7, 2022. From left are Tara Lipsyncki, Edgy, London Skies, Ana Lee Kage, Poppycock Visqueen, Sophia Azul and Lilia Maughn.
Editor’s note • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.
author
pjayswal@sltrib.com
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