Call Her Daddy - RuPaul: Blocking Out the Bullshit (FBF)
Episode Date: July 4, 2025Join Alex in the studio for a very raw interview with RuPaul! Alex and RuPaul discuss when he feels his most confident and why he prefers to be alone. RuPaul talks about his childhood and how he alway...s knew he was different from the other kids. He opens up about his parents’ broken relationship, the day his mom tried to set his father’s car on fire, and how he found himself mimicking their toxic behaviors in his own life. Alex and RuPaul discuss emotionally unavailable men, why it’s so important to break the cycle of bad partners, and how it truly doesn’t matter what other people think of you. RuPaul tells some crazy stories from his early days in the club scene and gets real about what he was doing to avoid confronting his feelings. RuPaul opens up about meeting his husband, falling in love, breaking up, and how they ultimately found their way back to each other. This interview is full of wisdom and shows a side of RuPaul we’ve never seen before… Enjoy!
Transcript
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What is up, Daddy Gang? It is your founding father, Alex Cooper with Call Her Daddy.
Okay, okay, okay. Rue Paul, welcome to Call Her Daddy.
Thanks.
Thank you so much for being here. I am very, very excited to talk to you. I think my fans
are going to freak out. I think this collab is going to be very fun. When are you your
most confident?
When I'm alone.
People freak me out, man.
People are freaky.
Most people think of confidence as power
or as having stuff or doing things,
but that's not, I feel most confident
when I'm not distracted by other people's bullshit.
Period.
Would you consider yourself high or low maintenance?
Oh, I am so low maintenance.
I am so low maintenance.
You would not believe it.
How, yes.
I can take care of myself.
And you know what?
I open my own door, I take care of myself.
Being alone with yourself, being good with yourself
and relying on yourself,
it's kind of all you fucking need.
It really is.
["Diamond Lover"]
Okay, let's talk about your memoir. Congratulations, The House of Hidden Meanings.
I think that this book is incredible because you offer a very personal look into your childhood.
You offer a personal look into early relationships and just some of the biggest struggles that
you've been through in your life.
So let's get into it. As a little boy, did you want to be famous? Like would anyone
have been surprised that you became famous in your life?
No one would have been surprised that I became famous. And did I want to become famous? It
wasn't even about did I want to. I knew it was my destiny. I felt that people would had
pointed me out from a very early age that says,
hey, who are you, what are you doing?
Hey you, you know, I was always,
different is the wrong term,
it was someone that people noticed, right?
So I knew that somehow my destiny involved being out front.
And the truth is I am an introvert masquerading as an extrovert and I can
do it. I can do the thing like, Hey, how you doing? What's up? Hey, you know what? Is that cashmere?
Oh my God, I love cashmere. Cashmere, not the word cashmere, you know, where I just go on and just
look like I'm being open, open, open. I know how to do it, but the truth is my real sense,
you know, I'm-
Just being chill.
Just being chill, yeah.
Do you get exhausted?
It can exhaust me.
I, you know, if I'm not working,
I like to spend time alone to recharge my battery,
but it can be exhausting.
Now I usually keep that hidden, tucked away,
and I pretend like, oh my God, is that cashmere?
And I'll do the thing. But the truth is,
I don't give a fuck about cashmere. But I do that to get through life and to maintain and to, you
know, to get endorsement deals and to get people to like me on social and do all the stuff.
First of all, thank you for just being honest because I think a lot of people actually will completely
to relate to what you're saying of like,
it's fucking exhausting trying to walk into work,
walk into rooms and having to put on a facade
because at the end of the day,
none of us are going to be completely the same
when we walk into a room with other people
than we are when we're alone.
But there is a world of social currency that you need to somewhat engage in, especially if this is
your career. It's like, you're right. You got to sit across from me right now. And I'm sorry,
but I'm going to ask you questions about this memoir. Listen, I do enjoy cashmere from time
to time. You know, I can do the thing. But what most people don't know about me is that is that base level thing, which is don't take any of this too
seriously. Otherwise, you get yourself caught up in in trouble
and and and wars and, you know, getting your feelings hurt. I
mean, it's it's a lot. It's a lot.
In the book, you talk a lot about your family dynamics. Can you kind of paint the
picture of what your relationship was like with your mother growing up?
I loved my mother. I love the fact that she too, she didn't believe the bullshit. She
just didn't. And unfortunately for her, I think most of that came out of world weariness.
And I think she didn't talk about her childhood very much but or at all but I have a feeling some really awful things happened to her as a
little girl and so she was very world-weary so she didn't put up the
pretence so you know like I can do the cashmere speak she did not at all at all
and she would cuss someone out we could cuss in the house, we could
do, you know, and, you know, I felt growing up my role was to sort of lift her up and I did and I
would do my impersonations for her, you know, of Tina Turner or Geraldine from the Flip Wilson show,
but she was, she had a dark, dark cloud over her. And I related to that. I,
I understood it very well because if you look at the world with
X-ray eyes, there is so much darkness and sadness.
So I choose joy. Now that doesn't mean that I don't recognize
the, the, the darkness or the pain,
but, and I do, I look at the darkness,
but I don't stare at it.
I want to say that again so you motherfuckers can get it.
I look at the darkness, but I don't stare,
because it will suck you in.
And you are a powerful witch.
You are a powerful, you can create whatever life you want.
Life asks, what do you want me to be?
Okay, I'll be that.
I also was just thinking I may be butchering this.
I remember there was this one line that you wrote about her basically saying something
about like, if I'm not paying their fucking taxes, why the fuck do I give a shit what
they're doing?
If they ain't paying your bills, pay them bitches, no mind.
That was my mother. And it's true.
And it's it's it's sort of, you know, the same
philosophy as what other people think of me is none of my business.
I'm curious, though, when you talk about your mother in the book, as,
you know, as strong as she was, like there as a child,
it seems like there wasn't a lot of was, like there as a child,
it seems like there wasn't a lot of this like affection and like coming to you with love.
Like how do you think you internalize that as a child?
Yeah, well, first of all, I put her first
and I understood what her pain was.
So I guess I justified her not being that affectionate
or that sort of idea of mothering that we all think of.
She was not that. In adulthood I understood that oh she probably could have been more loving but at
the time I felt empathy for her because I knew that she was in so much pain. I mean she was always
the whole time my childhood she was at war with my father, you know, and it made me feel like a diplomat.
And it taught me how to read the room and figure out what people needed.
I knew what I could say around my father and what I could say around my mother, these warring
factors and to not incriminate one or the other.
I knew how to give them what they wanted without without telling
giving too much information about my mother to my father and vice versa.
You talk about this big moment where your mom finds out that your dad was cheating on her
in the book. Can you kind of like talk to me about that day? Because it was a pretty intense day. Well, he was he'd always been, you know, out seeing other women.
But this was this one, I guess, this time it just rubbed her the wrong way.
And we will circle back around to the whole idea of cheating, too, because, you know,
x-ray eyes on a situation is cheating really a thing?
I mean, come on, people do things.
Men want to spread it around. It's just the animal that they are. Now, if someone promises
you that all of this area here is going to be only for them, they're lying.
You think?
Oh, no, not think, darling. Not think? Oh no, not think darling.
Not think. Wee, rude.
And I know for women they're like, oh no,
he's gonna be mine forever.
It's like, who the fuck are you fooling?
So everyone's cheating?
It's not cheating.
If you say you're gonna save all of this area
for one person, you are cheating on yourself.
You are cheating on yourself. You are cheating on yourself.
Should I not get married? I'm engaged.
You get married to whatever you want, but why would you, to the person you love the most,
why would you put restrictions on them? And your best friend in the whole wide world
who you love more than anyone else, why would you say
okay, if you're presented with a situation
that is so fabulous and so lovely, I don't want you to do it?
That is like the, that is an interesting way to look at it. And I love it.
You can get mad at me all you want with this philosophy. I didn't come up with it. It's
just my observation. And it's, it's true. And I grew up, you know, I'm around men
and men who are listening to this are going, yeah.
They're like fuck roof.
He's right. Look away, look away.
No, it's true, it's true.
So yeah, what happened with my mother and father,
two people who should have never been together, you know,
he parked the car in the garage of our house
and she poured gasoline all over the car and said,
motherfucker, I will light this bitch up.
And I'm five years old, my sisters,
Rozzie is four, Renee and Renette are seven years older
than me, we're across the street from the house
looking at this scene, and the whole neighborhood
is out there watching. she's like I will and
Irving is my father saying Tony please please don't don't and she's she's got a
pack of matches in her hand saying I will do it I'll do it eventually sister
Harris from her church comes in and talks her out of it and everything is
kind of fire trucks are there everything but when I think back on this scene, I'm not
in my body. I'm actually like a camera on a on a dolly or a jib looking at the
whole scene, moving around the scene like a camera outside of my body. And what
happens with young people, and we all do this, is we disassociate. And
so that the trauma of what's going on doesn't affect us on an emotional level, we separate
from our bodies. We separate from our bodies. And so I don't remember coming back into my
body until I got sober, which was when I, right before I turned 40. I was outside of my body the whole
time because it wasn't safe enough to be in there with those feelings. When you look back at that
moment, what does it make you feel for your younger self? I feel sad for my younger self.
I absolutely do. Let's talk about your relationship with your father, because I know that you wrote that
you felt very abandoned by him in moments in your life. And I'm wondering if you can
kind of just like paint the picture of that dynamic and if there are specific memories
that come up.
At the time I felt abandoned by him, but through years and years and years and years of therapy,
I realized he had abandoned himself. It wasn't personal. It's like reading the comments on YouTube or whatever about yourself. It has nothing to do
with me. It had everything to do with him. I think I'm talking too fast. I need to say that all of
that one more time. So people really need to understand what I just said, which is that it
had nothing to do with me. Of course, as a child, I thought he just doesn't like me.
He doesn't know.
He didn't like himself, baby.
It had nothing to do with you.
Now my ego wanted to make it about me, but no, no.
He, um, he, uh, I saw a psychic 30 years ago who said, well, you and your father shared past lives together.
So when you came into this life together,
you were like, hey, buddy, it's you,
let's party, let's boogie, hey, we're gonna have,
we're gonna rule the school.
But he could not see me.
And I spent so much time saying, wait, you need joy?
I'll give you some of my joy. You need, um, you need a reminder.
Let me remind you of who you are. Could not see it. And through therapy,
I really, well, he couldn't see it because for a person to become
present in this moment,
and this is true of every human on this planet to be present in this
moment,
every human on this planet to be present in this moment
would invite you to recognize how much pain you're in
right now. So we distract ourselves with whatever we can get our hands on
to not experience the depth of pain that we are in.
But to move forward in this life,
you have to walk through that fire. You have to walk through that pain
to get to the other side.
There's no other way.
There isn't, and I think it can take people a lifetime.
Some people never get to that point.
Some people engage in therapy,
and then they're like,
oh fuck, I don't wanna do this.
But it's like, you have to open it up
to actually see what's in there,
to then get through it, to get on the other side,
you're right.
And I think about this moment that you write about
in the book where you would sit outside your house
on the steps and you're waiting for your dad
and you're waiting for your dad.
And I think you're so right where so many people
can relate probably that are listening to like
yearning from like their parents for something
that they want and you're so right,
like it had nothing to fucking do with you.
He wasn't not showing up because he's like,
God, I hate Rue, I don't wanna see his face
when I pull up to the house.
But you're sitting there being like,
he didn't come home because it's me.
And he's like, it literally had nothing to do with you.
But that's hard to understand at such a young age.
So you just internalize it like,
damn, my dad fucking hates me.
He's abandoned me.
I'm nothing.
Like what's wrong with me?
That's right.
How did your relationship with your father
inform the romantic relationships
and then you ended up pursuing and choosing?
Well, obviously I never got that validation from my father.
So of course playing the role of Ruth's father
today is so and so and it would be the it's like it's like the exact replica, charming,
charismatic, good looking, but not available. So I would replay this thing over and over, relationship after relationship, until I ultimately met George, who was someone who chased me, chased me, and I didn't know
what to do with it. I said, you know, okay, so let me, okay, what's that going to look
like? I'm so used to being the chaser. So to allow someone to chase me, it changed everything.
It changed everything.
And of course, I had to get in touch with my ability to love myself.
Even just to accept it, like even you saying like, which we're gonna get to, like when you met your husband,
it must have been such a strange feeling to accept a love
that you had never experienced.
Your mother being distant, your father not showing up
for you to then have someone pursuing you.
You're like, what the fuck is going on?
Like this feels good, but what's off?
And so in a strange way, a lot of the times
the thing we're used to, that is what we gravitate towards
because it's the norm, even if it's fucking toxic
and even if it's unhealthy.
And it's like, what the fuck?
Preach bitch.
Right? Preach.
It's fucked. Testify.
You're like, I love this.
And it's like, but you watched your father abuse your mother.
You watched it.
So as fucked up as it is,
well, you never saw a healthy relationship. So how would you know, like, not to be scared when someone is just being
loving, being nice, coming to you, pursuing you, you're not begging for attention and affection
and love. You're like, the fuck is going on? Run, something must be off. Did I do, is it just genuine?
Is he lying? Is he using me? What is like the, you, you spiral and then you run back to what you're
used to. And you're like, how do we end the cycle?
Which you eventually did, but let's pause.
We need to stay in the twenties.
We need to stay in the twenties.
Then we'll get to the husband.
Well, but what you're describing is an abused child
who's taken away from abusive home, leaves there
and longs to go back home because that is what they know.
And oppressed people take on the characteristic of their
oppressor. And how do you break that cycle? You have to hit some type of rock bottom to
get to that place. And it is the most difficult thing you will ever do in your entire life.
When you talk about these early relationships that you went through before you found your
husband,
you say it felt like you would absorb your parents' toxic behaviors and patterns.
Fucking relatable. I understand you would like go for people that weren't available, but like
take me to a moment in a room with someone like what were you putting up with? And then you would
pause and be like, am I literally replicating what my fucking parents did? Like how am I here?
my fucking parents did? Like, how am I here?
Well, what the biggest offense
is not trusting your instinct
and your intuition about something.
This is something they don't tell you
about what getting old gives you,
is that you learn to trust your intuition
about a situation, a person.
And when you are somewhat hypnotized by a person like I was
early
20s all of that intuition you you push it to the side because you think this is exactly what I need
this is what I need looks like the the
validation I'm in love I was supposed to get from my father or from my mother but
that
That that never works. And in fact
the only
Validation you ever need really is from your adult self to your child. Yeah
it's just it's so fucking hard to break the cycle.
And I wanna talk about your 20s.
You became this well-known performer in the club scene.
And I know you referenced, like,
I was dissociating most of my life until I got sober.
And so let's talk about when you weren't sober,
taking the partying too far,
indulging so heavily in these moments.
Can you talk to me about your club life back then?
Yeah, well, listen, I have nowhere to go.
I used for 30 years.
I have nowhere to go.
The first 20 were a blast.
Had a great time.
It was his last 10 that were pure hell.
I had a blast.
Had a blast until it didn't work anymore.
And you know what?
Thank God for the drugs and alcohol
because it saved my life from it gave me a layaway plan,
a deferment plan until I was strong enough to deal with what was going on and thankfully I found
I found a 12-step program that really really really helped me so much that I am in love with. And so
I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for that. I would not be here if it wasn't for the success
I have today. I wouldn't have that if it weren't for this 12-step program because it takes
you through a process of walking back to the scene of the crime and forgiving yourself and
giving you the tools, the processing tools, to deal with all of the trauma of
what life is. You know, we all live with so much trauma and you know I feel that
not just America, I think the whole world is needs to hit rock bottom before we can pull
ourselves up because we you know, there are two ways to
learn. You can learn intellectually, or you can learn
by hitting your head on the on the on the corner of the thing.
Mama said, Rue, don't touch that stove. And now if I were smart,
I would have thought well, mama's been around for a while.
She she probably knows the right thing.
I'm gonna touch the stuff.
That's who we are.
We touch the stuff.
We are bashing our heads against everything.
And I agree with you.
I think there's gonna have to be a rebuild moment.
I appreciate the way you just explained though,
like the drugs and the alcohol and what they were for you,
because I think people
that haven't had hardship in their life are the people that are like, why don't you just
leave the abusive relationship?
Why don't you just leave?
Just stop.
And it's like the pain that you're describing and the pain that people go through when they
do dissociate, there is like a level where like you actually can't reengage with your
reality until you're fucking
ready. It's like how I always talk with friends who have been to certain things are like, should I
get into therapy? I'm like, when you're ready, not because I'm saying like, you really need it. Of
course, you know you need it. But when are you ready to actually accept it instead of everyone
shoving you in the door? Go to rehab, go get help. No, no. When do you know you're ready?
Everyone has a different threshold.
Everyone needs to go at a different pace,
but the judgment around people that aren't ready,
I think we need to have some fucking grace
because it is not that fucking linear and simple.
It's just not.
It's not.
And people are just fucking assholes about it.
I'm curious, like, when you look back at that time
in your life, as fun as it was,
did you have any like
self-sabotaging tendencies back then at all? Well the only, obviously drugs and alcohol put you in situations that could be highly dangerous and I was in those situations, really mostly, aside from the drugs, that was with people
that I was attracted to and trying to relive
the situation with my father.
And I guess really with my mother too, you know,
trying to find a situation that would feed my soul.
I was looking for soul food.
And I was looking for a way to fill that void
when ultimately that void had to be filled by me. You talk about how you for a while were like
quite uncomfortable with the idea of being wanted, being desired. What types of things were you
doing to avoid being seen sexually?
Oh listen, I didn't have to do anything to not be seen sexually. Here's the thing, you know,
I've always been an oddball. I don't fit into anyone's description of what sexual,
in the sexual hierarchy, right? The sexual hierarchy is, oh, he's a daddy. Oh, you're a
twink. And there's a whole list of, you're a twink, you're,
and there's a whole list of those things.
I never fit into any of those things
until the first time I got into drag,
people, men or straight men went, oh, you're that.
And it scared me, it shocked me
because I'd never experienced that kind of,
what's the word where you're being objectified, objectification.
I'd never experienced that before because I'd never fit into the sexual hierarchy of
wa-la-la. So when I got into drag, just as a fluke, my band was doing this thing and
we got into drag, okay. I couldn't believe the attention that I got.
And I wasn't doing high glam drag.
I was doing, I didn't shave my legs, my hairy chest.
I, you know, I smeared lipstick and just,
it was like punk rock, you know, drag.
But I noticed a difference in the energy I was getting.
["Darker than the Night"] in the energy I was getting. Let's talk about George because it almost made me tear up when you teared up at the very beginning
of this interview. You just mentioned his name and you got teary eyed. And I don't know
like what comes up for you when you even just saying he's lovely. He's lovely person. He
can be he's grumpy. He's he's angry. He's all of those things, but he's lovely. He really
is. He's a lovely person. And I like him more than anybody else. I mean, I think that's great too
because you obviously love being alone.
So someone who loves being alone so much, I'm very similar.
I sit here and I perform all day
and I need to get the fuck home.
Don't fucking talk to me.
Don't look at me.
And my fiance just knows like, let her be alone.
But I do appreciate his company, which makes me know,
oh, I actually fucking like him.
I actually like you.
What was it about him when you met him
that you remember being like, this man is different
other than him pursuing you?
Well, it was the fact that he was kind
and that I trusted him.
I trusted him with my feelings.
Because growing up in between two warring factors,
my parents were so obsessed with their own psycho dramas that it wasn't a
safe place for me to feel nurtured. You mentioned that my father's weekends with my sister and
I, he was meant to pick us up at that morning. And we'd sit on the porch and wait for him all day.
And when I say all day, I mean, sitting on that porch
all day, he would never show up, waiting for him.
And we'd say, Rosy and I would say,
next car's gonna be daddy, next car's gonna be daddy.
We do that all day long.
And so I didn't trust my parents with my feelings.
You know, I would, you know,
I would sort of mother my mother with, you know,
joy and bring her up and all that kind of stuff.
So when I met George,
I could tell from the moment I met him
that he was lovely and kind.
And I could trust him with my feelings,
that he wouldn't hurt my feelings.
He has never hurt my feelings, never.
And my mother, when I was, my mother said to me,
Rue, you're too goddamn sensitive.
I was five years old at the time, five.
She said, she also said, Rue, you reminisce too much.
And I was five, five years of reminiscing.
But, you know know it was insight into
her because years later as an adult I learned that she was actually trying to warn me to not
do what she did and I it was very telling about her that she was too sensitive and that she
reminisced too much. Interesting.
So, and that didn't occur to me.
I only got that probably 10 years ago where I went, Oh, that's what that was.
So anyway, George was, uh, so open and not, uh, secretive.
He was just open.
In fact, I tell this story at one point, when we first started
dating, he asked me, Hey, can I floss your teeth? No, you can't floss my teeth. Why did
he want to floss? Because he wanted to be that intimate with me. He was, it was, you know, and I never forgot that because it just,
that someone would want, what?
But now when you look back on and saying that, like how does that make you feel when you reflect
on him saying that to you? It makes me feel like he wanted to be, he wanted to not only be inside me, but he wanted to be a part of me.
That level of intimacy I had never experienced before. And it allowed, it was a signal to the
child who lives inside of me that it's okay. You can relax with him.
You can relax with him.
He's not going anywhere.
In fact, we split up when we got sober together,
we split up, still couldn't shake him,
couldn't, we'd still called three times a day.
And ultimately we did get back together again
and eventually got married.
I want to go through that too because it's a very...
Breaking up with someone that you then end up with is rare.
I feel like it takes a really special bond.
But just going back to what you just said, it's so...
It's so inspiring to see the trauma you went through
and the partners you would choose that were replicating
just what you watch with your mother and father
then finding George, it's interesting to see like
even the way you just spoke, like you got calmer,
it got more still, you could be yourself.
Like in what ways once you started to engage
in a healthy relationship,
how long did it take you to actually trust and be yourself?
Cause I'm sure there are people listening to like, Rue, I fucking hope to God one day get to where you're at. Like, how long did
it actually take once you met him to be like, trust, don't bring up my old shit. Like, don't
put on him what I've done in other relationships. Like, that's a lot of fucking work. Yeah, no, and
don't trust me. I, you know, I, the, the, the beast still came out, you know, in
our relationship and my distrust, but, uh, uh, soon enough, you know, he would put me
at ease and, uh, you know, it takes time and, you know, even the time that we were apart,
uh, we both realized that there's no one I like more. And the chances of me meeting someone
who I felt that comfortable with
and that much myself with is very rare, very rare.
You know, when we're young, we think,
oh, I've got all the choices in the world.
And when you look back, I'm 63,
you look back and you go,
there were very few
situations where people had all their shit together. Not shit together, you know, bank accounts and all that kind of stuff. I'm not talking about that. But knew enough about themselves to
not hurt you and project their own hurt out at you, you know, which is I think what?
My parents my parents did and you know, and I can forgive them now. There's a book called
Toxic parents that really helped me a lot by dr. Susan forward that really walks walked me through the steps of
Overcoming the steps of overcoming the trauma of my parents.
I think it's also incredible because sometimes like we run away from things that make us
feel good depending on again our trauma of like this can't be this good.
And I think with George it's so clear that like although you were both going through
things which I do want to talk about with addiction,
like you knew at the core how you felt around this human
being, and that is something that lasts forever.
How someone makes you feel, you never shake that.
And you did break up.
Can we talk about that just a little bit of like,
how did you decide, cause it was mainly you, right?
That did decide like, we need to put this on pause.
Well, it was, it was mutual.
What happened was,
we had this condo in Florida, in Miami,
that George was redoing.
And I learned that he had been addicted to crystal meth,
which is the devil. So I put him into rehab and then brought
him to a 12-step program. And I went with him to support him in this 12-step program,
only to realize this was for me. I need this. And I realized too that I had been living my fame and fortune
through George, vicariously through George. So I realized that if I am living
through him and he's in this much trouble, that's how much trouble I'm in.
You were living your fame through George. What do you mean by that? Well, at five, when I had dissociated and separated,
became a camera on a jib,
I realized I had not come back into my body
because it was not safe.
It didn't feel comfortable for me
to feel my feelings firsthand.
I could feel my feelings through him. You know, we'd be flying to Dusseldorf
on Elton John's private jet and he'd be like, oh my god, this is great. So I'd be happy because I
informed me, this is great, this is great. But I could not feel my feelings firsthand.
Right, you're like looking for the outside validation
of like what is going on here? Like oh this is great, great, this is great, sure, for sure George.
What like interesting. Yes and it wasn't until I got sober that I was able to bring my feelings
and my camera in through my own eyes. But when you looked at George and you recognized he was addicted
to crystal meth, that is also when you said, well, I also have an addiction problem.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I'd always used, I'd use,
I started using when I was 10 years old.
I started smoking weed when I was 10 years.
Listen, Alex, it was a different time.
I'm not judging.
It was San Diego, California.
It's a different thing.
It's not like the way people think of it today.
Do you remember when you tried your first hard drug?
Yes. I was probably 13. And back then there was something called Red Devils.
And I took a Red Devil pill. I don't know where I got it. I don't know. But
what was it like? What is the effects?
I don't know if I don't remember if it was an upper or a downer.
I really do not remember. But I do remember it was around that
time. But I was I wasn't afraid of drugs. I never I never shot
up or anything. But, you know, but also the big, the big thing
was that I never had any money so
I was at the mercy of whoever I was around, you know, um, and then in my 20s
This is I just I shouldn't say this but i'm going to in my 20s. Uh every I dropped acid every weekend
uh Throughout my 20s every weekend like four hits of acid every weekend. Have
you ever dropped acid? I have never done it. What does it feel like? Well, I'll tell you.
Okay. It's well, we're going to listen, you're an adult. Don't do acid. Yeah, yeah, whatever.
Yeah, fucking incredible. It's incredible. Because it was the it was the it was the it was the um the proof I had that
this world is an illusion that everything you think you know about solid objects or what people
are is a lie and I I had that I had that suspicion before I dropped acid. So when I dropped acid, it was like,
yes, this is exactly. And the people who freak out, and I used to drop it, and some people
would freak out, you know what that means, you're like, oh my God. Those are the people
who it never occurred to them that this is an illusion. From the day I was born, I thought, this is an illusion.
So the minute you dropped acid, you were like, damn right.
Yeah.
It lifts the veil of the illusion,
the fantasy that we collectively agree to in our lives.
Did you, like when you got so famous
and you're in New York and and
people know who you are like were you at all ever paranoid that people were gonna
be like RuPaul is like fucked up or there's something you know what I mean?
I do. I was downtown famous in my 20s but I didn't get world famous until I was 32
32 and I had stopped doing chemicals I I just, I was just smoking weed
then. And then in my late thirties, uh, as doing a little bit of Coke, a little bit too much Coke,
uh, but really in private with friends. But so I would never be, I would be stoned. I was always stoned from, you know, I was awakened Baker.
I'm curious, like, you're so famous. And how does that make you feel? Like,
you know, it's, you know, it doesn't feel any different from when I was five years old
and the kids in the neighborhood said, Oh, you're a sissy. They, they, I was always pointed out.
I was always singled out and said, huh, you're something, you're something different.
Uh, I didn't know what the connotation, I didn't know that was sex.
It didn't have a sex.
I thought, Oh, okay.
At, you know, five years old.
So, but the, my point is that I always felt, always felt singled out that there was something going
on with me and I had to learn to accept that.
So does it feel any different from back then?
No, it doesn't.
It feels like I have a purpose that I came here to do and it's part of it.
Because I just am curious because knowing that a lot of performers, I think, are
introverts that become extroverts on stage when they're performing. Like, I know a lot of musicians
that are like, oh my god, bitch, when I get on fucking stage, it's a complete alter ego. Like,
that's not me. I go home and I'm like in my PJs and make up off and not focused on like that persona.
But do you ever have moments or have you ever had a moment in your career where you've resented the persona you've built?
No, no, because I take that shit off.
That's, that's, it's a part of me, but it's not, it's not who I am.
And thankfully, you know, you know, drag is so brilliant because it's like a wink wink nudge nudge at the facade that we're
talking about, that being on tripping breaks through that.
Drag is an extension of that wink wink nudge nudge.
And so it's not really to be taken seriously.
It's paint, powder, but I never once thought that's who I am.
Right. Yeah. It's supposed to be fun. You're supposed to enjoy it.
Absolutely. People take shit too fucking seriously.
They take stuff too seriously. And they read into it too much.
You're like, it's not that deep. It's not that deep.
It's really not. You know? I want to circle back just to conclude that
conversation about George. Like the book kind of ends like you're not really together.
Yeah. And I thought that was such an interesting that conversation about George. Like the book kind of ends like you're not really together.
And I thought that was such an interesting stylistic choice of like why, how did you decide to end it
like that? Because it was the real the death of my old self. And this has been the rebirth of my life. This is a whole other book, this part, you know, in this business,
if you get seven years in this business, you've done great, great. But for me to have the
opportunity to have another bite of the apple, because I got my shit together.
Amazing.
So that's a whole other story.
So, you know, ending it at my getting sober
was felt like the natural place.
I feel like from what I've read and looked up,
like you and George are pretty like notoriously private
people together with your relationship.
Like how did you decide and did you talk to him about that you were going to write
about these like pretty intimate details of your lives?
He doesn't give a shit.
It's like, bitch, just go.
Just write.
They were, you know, going on this book tour and the people were saying, hey,
we've got some seats set aside for George.
Do you want to?
He didn't want to go to that.
He didn't care about that. Stop. I love it. He doesn't want to go to that. He doesn't care about that.
Stop. I love it. He doesn't know who any pop stars are. He doesn't. He doesn't care. He
don't care. So refreshing though. He does not care. But that must be nice for your life. Oh,
yeah. To come home to someone that's literally like, I don't care. Yeah. No, he doesn't give
shit about this stuff. You're like, babe, guess what I did today? He's like, I care about you did,
but I don't actually care who was in the room. You're like, Beyonce was there.
He's like, huh?
No, he fucking knows who Beyonce is.
He knows who she is.
He would care, let's see.
Who would he care about?
He loves Aretha Franklin.
Of course, she's dead now.
Of course, yeah, she can't walk in the room, but.
Actually, he went with me.
I thank God he was with me.
In 1995, he went with me to Detroit. I performed at
Aretha Franklin's birthday party and we were in there and her assistant came in with the
check for me that she had written for my payment. This is before I went on stage. And the check
was written out to Ruth Paul.
Signed Aretha Franklin, Ruth Paul. And of course I couldn't keep it, I wanted to keep it,
but thank God George was there with me
so he could see it so that it wasn't,
I didn't dream this up, it's really real.
They took the check back and wrote it out to Ruth Paul,
but.
Oh my God.
But so he met her.
Yes.
So he hasn't been stunned since 1995.
It's like fuck, George hasn't lived since 1995.
He hasn't felt something.
I know, I'm trying to think who he would be starstruck by.
He wouldn't be starstruck by anyone.
He, you know, this sounds weird.
Like I'm trying to gain him points,
but he is more starstruck by animals
and he knows the name of every flower and he knows
the name of every animal like what they what they are he knows the breed of every dog so he and and
you know he children gravitate toward he's that person why do we give a fuck about celebrities
anymore i want to know dogs animals the flowers the insects let the insects. Let's go George.
Well, don't get me wrong, he's got his faults.
He's got his faults.
You mentioned drag and it's just, it is so incredible to have a show on its 16th season. That's kind of unheard of.
Like there's very few shows in the world that like go that long.
Do you remember the beginning days?
I do.
Like what does it make you think to like look at this empire that you've built?
Like you just must be so proud. I am very proud. I'm most most
proud of the contestants who have come through there who are so lovely and so
courageous to allow their stories to be told and to share those stories of
courage with people around the world. What do you think is the biggest
misconception about drag?
Oh, I don't know.
You know, I stopped trying to figure out what people think
or try to make, put any credence on what other people think.
People are crazy.
Are weird.
Yeah.
I remember you said that in the beginning of this interview
and I'm like, that feels like that's the episode title.
People are weird.
Well, you know, when you free yourself from
that, you know, my mother said if they ain't paying your bills, pay them bitches no mind, or
you know, what other people think of me is none of my business. When you free yourself of that,
it leaves so much room for your own frequency to resonate and transmit through you. Because that kind of thinking
of what other people think of you takes up so much space.
It's exhausting.
It's exhausting.
We don't have time.
There's no time.
And you know, when I hit 30,
I realized the biggest lesson I got when I turned 30 was,
I don't have to like everyone
and everyone doesn't have to like me. Amen. Like we're so fucked. Some people are so pressed being like they don't
understand. They don't like. Who fucking cares? Do you know you? Do you understand
you? Does your family, friends, or whoever the fuck you give a shit about know you?
Done. There you go. You're gonna exhaust yourself. You're not even gonna know who
you are by the end if you're trying to appease every fucking person,
especially with the internet,
you got bitches in fucking Kansas saying,
you're a fucking loser.
Who cares?
Yeah. Yeah.
And if you had X-ray eyes to see where that bitch
in Kansas was, that bitch is in a basement with a big,
with internet, but in a basement nonetheless.
They've got their mother's basement,
their mother's basement, the mother's wifi, and they they're in keyword warrior like you're a fucking loser. Shut up bitch and Kansas.
God, we're done with you. Fuck. Can't take these bitches. Okay. You write in your book,
you're born naked and the rest is drag. What do you mean by that? So you are born naked. So that concept allows you to create whatever life you want.
You are a co-creator with whatever the source is.
I mean, some people say God, some people say whatever.
Whatever you choose to be the source, you are a co-creator with that.
That's a lot of responsibility.
It is a lot.
But it's also, it is exciting
if you look at it in the right way.
Like we do have, for the most part,
autonomy over ourselves, sort of.
Sort of, yeah.
You don't need to get into the laws going right now,
fuck yourselves.
But you know, it is exciting to know
you can control yourself.
And I think sometimes we get a little in the clouds
and we start to look around us too much
where it's like, why are you trying to be like that person,
that person, that person?
Why are you trying to pee?
What do you want?
And I don't think we ask ourselves that enough
because I don't think we're taught it.
Like you said in the middle of this interview,
you were like, my mom told me like,
stop being emotional, Ru, and stop doing this.
But it was all, again, projection from your mother.
It's like, well, maybe the most beautiful part of you
is that you're emotional.
Sure.
Maybe you should lean into that.
What do you want?
And I think we can take from this especially,
just like, live the way that you wanna live
and block out as much noise as you possibly can.
It's hard, but when you do it,
there is some peace and quiet
that you can find within yourself.
It is hard. And of course it all roads lead to,
are you willing to be in this moment with yourself,
which is a tall order because the first thing you would recognize if you did
that, it was how much pain you're in. So again, you have to walk through that fire,
which is painful, uh,
to get to your true self.
Because a lot of us, we sweep the emotions.
In my case, I dissociated with myself.
We sweep a lot of our feelings under the rug.
I did that with drugs and alcohol until I had to pay the bill.
And when you look at the bill, you're like, what?
Fuck it's big and long.
Wait, who ordered the Pellegrino?
What does the Pellegrino stand for in your life, Rue? What does it symbolize?
You know, and so you have to, you literally have to go through all of the stuff that you
put away before you can move forward.
So that's why most people don't accept the challenge of creating the life they were meant to have.
Most people go with plan A or plan B. And a lot of times, I think because
plan A or plan B doesn't really fit your needs, you will use drugs and alcohol to numb the pain.
That's what we're all, we're a culture of addicts. We're all addicted to something.
I mean, we're a culture of addicts. We're all addicted to something.
But imagine if we were taught how to process those feelings.
I used drugs and alcohols to process,
to deal with feelings I didn't know how to process
until eventually I did learn how to process those feelings.
Imagine a world, a culture of people who could do that.
When we're able to do that,
I think the amount of like peace and unity that will come
from all different walks of life
and all different backgrounds,
we're so fucking far from that, but you're so right.
It's like, we're not taught to process,
so we're angry and we're miserable and we're anxious
and we're insecure and we are lost.
And I appreciate you coming on today and
just talking through this because I do I think it's so inspiring for people listening the way
you talk about your memoir being almost like this other part of you that now is put to bed and
there's now a complete new book basically that's being created right now as you're sitting here
and the way you're living your life.
I think we need to start to look at ourselves that way of like you can have
been many different people in your life and it doesn't define you.
It's part of you.
But I think every new chapter is on you to decide how it's going to be written.
So I hope this was fun.
It was fun.
It was better. No, it's actually a lot of fun.
And I love what you're saying there, because what the truth is, it's about the crucifixion and the
resurrection. And once you're able to be reborn into your higher self, that's when the party
really begins. And that's why I feel like this, the party for me,
you know, when I got sober, really started, you know?
And I needed to put that first part to bed.
And that's what the House of Hidden Meanings is about.
It's incredible.
Everyone, please go read it and congratulations to you
because it is so cool to see.
Like, I love that you did a memoir
where it stops at 1999, basically.
Mm-hmm. Something like 2000, something like that.
Yeah, 2000. And now it's like, what's next? Love it. RuPaul, thank you so much for coming
on Color Daddy. It truly was a pleasure. Thank you.
Thank you. Thanks for watching!