What A Day - Drag Queen History Hour
Episode Date: June 28, 2022The Supreme Court issued more rulings on Monday. There have also been several legal challenges to the trigger laws set to go into effect in states like Louisiana and Utah once the court overturned Roe... last Friday.Today is the 53rd anniversary of the Stonewall Riots. In honor of the drag queens of color like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera who were central to the fight for LGBTQ equality, we walk through the history of drag and politics.We talk to actor and activist Terence Smith about his iconic presidential campaign as his drag persona, Joan Jett Blakk. RuPaul’s Drag Race alum Peppermint tells us about how she’s used her platform to advocate for the queer community. And Taylor Alxndr of Southern Fried Queer Pride explains how they use drag as a tool for political organizing in their community.Show Notes:AP: “Supreme Court backs coach in praying on field after games” – https://bit.ly/3ypzc3BJoan Jett Blakk in “The Beauty President” – https://vimeo.com/639178680Donate to Crooked Media’s Pride Fund – https://crooked.com/pride/Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is Tuesday, June 28th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Travelle Anderson. And this is What A Day,
featuring news that hits harder than a gentle hand does on Rudy Giuliani's back.
Yes. Don't know if you saw, but Rudy claims he was assaulted in a grocery store this Sunday.
More so, he was touched. WOD tries to give you headlines in the same way Rudy
experiences light touching.
Yeah, don't think about it too much.
Just accept it.
On today's show, I am going to take over most of the episode to revisit the political roots
of drag as Pride Month wraps up.
That's right.
Drag goes deeper than just RuPaul's Drag Race.
Yes, stick around for that.
But first, the Supreme Court issued more rulings yesterday,
including one pertaining to Joseph Kennedy,
a former public high school football coach
in Washington State.
In a 6-3 decision, the court ruled in favor of Kennedy,
saying that his right to kneel and pray on the field
after games was in fact protected by the First Amendment.
This comes after the court ruled last week
that the state of Maine could not exclude religious schools from a tuition program. So no, you are not just sensing a pattern
here. We'll have a couple links to more on this story in our show notes to explain it more in
depth. Listen, Gideon, I love God like the next person, but I need them to calm down. Now, getting
back to the fallout from the court last week, there's been a flurry
of legal responses and ramifications in a number of states that had so-called trigger laws set to
go into effect once Roe was overturned. Can you walk us through some of those?
Yeah, it is happening really quickly. So quickly, in fact, there might be quite a bit more in the
minutes and hours to come. But as we record on Monday night around 930 Eastern, here are some examples from the last 24 hours or so.
So in Louisiana, a judge temporarily blocked the state from imposing its own trigger abortion ban.
Abortion providers in the state had said that the law is, quote unquote, constitutionally vague.
And there is a hearing set for next week now.
According to reporting from The New York Times, at least one of the clinics involved in the petition is set to actually continue operating for now. In Utah,
the state's Planned Parenthood Association filed a lawsuit this past weekend to block Utah's trigger
law. On Monday, a judge similarly temporarily blocked enforcement of the ban as a result of
this suit, which is set to last for two weeks. In Ohio, the local ACLU and Planned Parenthood have similar plans
for a suit, and a number of providers in other states, including Mississippi, which was at the
center of the SCOTUS ruling, have also gone to court already. Meanwhile, lawmakers in California
voted to put an amendment on the November ballot that would enshrine abortion and contraceptive
rights into the state's constitution. So, Travelle, that is just a little bit of what's happened at the Supreme Court and in the states since the overturning of Roe. Tomorrow, we're
going to get into more on where things stand with Kelly Robinson, the executive director of the
Planned Parenthood Action Fund. Yes, and there is so much more there to talk about. And interestingly
enough, right after the Supreme Court overturned Roe, it was Pride
weekend in many cities across the country.
Considering several of those festivals and marches ended up taking on a somber and even
more political tone.
I'm afraid with what just happened and how easy it happened that they might come for
us and come for our rights again.
That's one New York marcher who talked to Reuters
and many more people talked about how important it is
to bring politics back into pride
because conservatives aren't just fighting
to roll back abortion rights.
They've also targeted birth control access,
marriage equality, and even drag queens.
Take a listen.
Well, I've seen a lot of things in life,
but I don't know if I've ever seen anything
quite this hideous.
In America, in Dallas, Texas,
this nonsense.
So-called drag queens with kids.
The nonsense is the clip.
He's describing what he's saying himself.
So-called drag queens.
Yeah, wow.
I'm so sorry for all the damage caused, of course.
Yes, and sorry to everyone who had to hear that, but because today is the 53rd anniversary of the
Stonewall Riots, we're going to do something different, something fun, hopefully empowering,
with a very special episode to wrap up Pride Month. And because I was made to listen to that,
I'm going to step aside and let you have the mic for a while
to propel us on. Yes, give me
the mic, because the category
is drag darling,
okay? I'm going to walk
the WOD squad through the history
of drag and politics from
its past. Dressing up as a woman is
the ultimate thing to their patriots.
To its present. It's meant
the world to me to have a platform that is further reaching than what it would
have been had I not been on a show like Drag Race.
And its future.
Drag can be so much more than what we have right now, and it's a beautiful thing.
So let's get started with the Stonewall Riots.
Though there were plenty of demonstrations across the country pushing back against anti-LGBTQ behavior by law enforcement,
it's the Stonewall Riots that are credited with transforming the LGBTQ rights movement.
It was there that queer folks and street kids and drag artists, especially drag queens of color, were central to the fight for equality.
Let me take you back to that day.
It's June 28th, 1969 in New York City.
There's this gay bar in lower Manhattan called the Stonewall Inn.
Somebody's throwing back a Jack and Coke, I'm sure.
Somebody's doing a vodka cranberry, my drink of choice.
And in the early hours of the morning, police raided the bar.
Now, this kind of practice was common at the time. Police would
often break up parties and arrest people for wearing clothing that didn't align with their
sex on their IDs. We call those the three article rule. But on this particular day, the bar patrons
and many other community members who had gathered outside the bar after the raid decided to fight
back. Take a listen to someone who was there. This is
Craig Rodwell. He's a gay rights activist credited as one of the leaders of the movement before and
after Stonewall. Here he is remembering it months later to a documentarian. I was on my way home
from a friend's house and a crowd was gathering out in front. There was a paddy wagon pulled up
and a few people being taken out. It started with a few coins and pebbles being thrown at the police and then the police retreated
into the stone wall and chanted gay power and get the mafia out of the bars.
And then after the police barricaded themselves inside, the riot police started moving up
Christopher, breaking up the crowd, which had really become a very angry crowd.
Hundreds of bottles and rocks. There wasn't one window left in the whole place after about 10 minutes.
I think they thought that people would just go home and run, especially since they were gay people.
They're not used to gay people standing up at all.
That was kind of how things were, right? And so for the next four days, the riots, or the Stonewall Uprisings, as they're sometimes called,
they continued with more queer folks, more trans folks standing up against all of this behavior.
Two icons on the front lines were Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera.
They were trans rights advocates, and both Marsha and Sylvia identified
as drag queens. To me, that is all the proof we need to identify the vital role drag artists can
have in these social, cultural, and political battles. And it's because of their work and the
many, many others at Stonewall that the momentum for LGBTQ rights kept going, so much so that the year after that,
that's the sound of protesters in New York in 1970 chanting on the first anniversary of Stonewall.
That was among the very first pride parades in the country. Others took place that same year in
cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. And every year since,
queer and trans people take to the streets in June in celebration of Pride and to commemorate
that fateful night. Now, knowing that drag artists were key to getting all of that going
might be surprising for some of you whose knowledge of drag only goes as far as this. Yes, I know some of you know that song. We'll get to it
momentarily. But these days, drag seems like it's everywhere. It's on TV. It's in bars. It's in
clubs, restaurants. And more and more people are doing drag, watching it, and paying for it all
over the world. But when Marsha and Sylvia were doing it,
it was a criminal offense that could get them arrested.
So I wanted you to know more about what it was like to do drag back in the day
when it wasn't as widely accepted as it is now.
Let me introduce you to Terrence Smith.
Long ago, he was a legendary Chicago drag queen known as Joan Jett Black.
Terrence began doing drag in the 70s, not too
long after the Stonewall riots. He was heavily involved in political organizing for the LGBTQ
plus community throughout his career, and he knew early on that his very existence as a black gay
man and a drag queen was inherently political. The day Terrence turned 35, he not only became
eligible to run for president, but he actually launched a campaign for president as his drag persona, Joan Jett Black.
Terrence shares a bit of his story in the short documentary, The Beauty President, which we will link to in the show notes.
But he's also here with me now.
Terrence, I want to ask you to explain to all the unaware who may be listening, why is drag
political?
We live in a patriarchy.
Anything that takes away from that and dressing up as a woman is the ultimate anti-patriarchy.
It's the ultimate anti-patriarchy in a way.
At what point did you decide that your drag persona as Joan Jett Black could be a vehicle for your political activism?
When Queen Nation asked me to run for mayor,
mayor of Chicago, I was like,
wow, that's, I'm gonna do it.
And even though it's satire,
I wanna make it seem as real as I possibly can.
So that meant talking about the issues
in a way that nobody else could.
Well, it worked.
And in Chicago, they were starving for something different to it worked. And in Chicago, they were stargazing
for something different to talk about. And then suddenly, there's this black track saying,
I want to be mayor. And they weren't nasty. They were like, this is hilarious.
You mentioned you ran for mayor in Chicago. And then you followed that up the year later,
running for president of the United States. You were, you know, beat out by some guy named Bill
Clinton. At least I wasn't beat off by Bill Clinton. Could you talk to us a little bit about
making the decision after the mayor campaign to run for president and the types of policies that
you were advocating for? Coordination was about visibility.
You know, if they could see us,
hopefully they would beat us up less, you know.
And they told us that anybody could be president of the United States.
I figured, well, okay, let's see, you know.
I was going to take some military budget,
education budget and switch them.
Nobody would have to pay for student loans
and medicine, you know, that would
have been taken care of. I mentioned, I not only would I fire the police, but I would hire dags on
bikes. It's interesting that one of a couple of them have happened since, you know, legalizing
weed. Oh, and I get to claim this right now. One of the things that I promised I would do if I were
elected president was I would give every woman in the country like three days off a month pay because they need to have that monthly visitor.
They just made that a law in Spain. Now, I can't say that they heard me say it.
I have no proof, but I said it. And now it's a law in Spain. So today we have RuPaul's Drag Race.
One of the main ways, right, that folks know drag, know drag queens.
We see drag queens in, you know, they're on daytime television, you know, being interviewed and stuff now.
What are some of your thoughts on that like generational shift that we see today in terms of how people regard drag. And I'm wondering if it gives you any hope for
more progress towards LGBTQ rights. Definitely. I think the world has really opened up a lot.
Now you have 10-year-old boys in drag and their parents encourage them. I've met more people that
say, I don't consider myself male or female. I mean, I'm always like, wow, really?
That's great.
And I really like that.
Young people, younger and younger are discovering their self.
And the first thing they do is they're proud of it.
They want to tell people.
And you couldn't say that years ago.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't know if women would say that years ago.
Well, Terrence, thanks so much for being on What A Day.
And in a moment, I'm going to tell you all about what drag is like today and how it can get back to its political roots in the future.
But first, we've got some bills to pay. We got to keep the lights on around here.
So here are some ads. welcome back wad squad travell here riding solo in this jiggy jungle through the wonderful world
of drag before the break i gave you a history lesson about what drag activism was like before
today but let's talk about what might be, for many of you,
your first introduction to drag.
Racers, start your engines,
and may the best drag queen win.
In case you were wondering, I'm Team Shea Coulee,
but ever since RuPaul's Drag Race debuted on TV in 2009,
the award-winning reality competition show
has grown exponentially.
And because of it,
drag queens have walked the Oscars red carpet,
they're in major fashion campaigns,
and RuPaul himself has won a whopping 11 Emmys,
with more likely on the way.
We needed to know what it's like to be on that national stage,
which has come to define drag.
I just had to talk to a Ru girl myself. That was, of course, the one and only Miss Peppermint,
who was on season nine. Peppermint is a drag performer from New York City, where she's a
local legend. She was one of the first openly trans people to compete on the show, and she was
Broadway's first out trans woman to originate a lead role in the musical Head Over Heels. But she's not just a
performer, she's also a drag activist. For instance, she's the ACLU's first artist
ambassador for trans justice, working with the organization to combat anti-
trans and anti-LGBTQ plus state legislation. So Peppermint, it's a huge
honor for you and for me for us to be together here on What A Day.
Can you start by telling us about the history of what drag was like for you before you did the show?
Contrary to how well drag is documented, everything from the makeup, the personalities on film and television and the Internet and social media today, it was quite underground just 10, 20 years ago. Like a lot of queer
history, if you will, it wasn't that well documented, except for like the stories of
people that were probably drunk in some bar that are going to retell it. You can go back and do
your research on your history, but you're not going to see a video of it. So that was good and
bad. Bad because it's, you know, future generations will just have to believe what we said
when we said, oh, she levitated off the ground, honey.
But it also meant that person could do enough drugs to levitate off the ground
and not go to jail because nobody was filming it, right?
And so when we say it was political and these people were like being revolutionary
and being activists just by doing what they were doing,
it literally was that.
I think that notion carried from then
through, of course, into the 70s and 80s
with the AIDS epidemic and drag entertainers.
Naturally, if you were doing drag,
you were performing somewhere and you had a platform
and you knew how to use your voice and speak in a way that people would listen.
Naturally, that kind of thing goes hand in hand when your people are suffering or being discriminated against.
You're going to hopefully use your platform to affect some change.
And so I think that is what we're hearing when we hear about Stonewall.
Those are the legacies that have been passed on to drag entertainers today.
Yeah, I'm so glad you mentioned that.
With this particular political moment that we are in,
with the anti-trans bills, the don't say gay bills,
the other foolishness going around,
what has being on Drag Race
and now being able to spread your messages with the platforms that you have.
What does that mean to you, considering what we see in the political establishment right now?
I'm actually in a situation where what I have to say is valued past just me and my girlfriends.
Because there was a moment in time, you're only going to hear what a Black trans woman was saying
if you were a Black trans woman sitting in a room with other black trans women, because nobody else cared. Had I been doing this
40, 50 years ago, I probably would have been in hiding somewhere, just fighting for the right to
be able to walk outside without being arrested in the clothing that I'm wearing. It's meant the
world to me to have a platform that is further reaching than what it would have been had I not been on a show like Drag Race. I've had many opportunities open up. Since then, film and TV things,
there was definitely people who said, girl, don't even mention politics. Don't even talk about
anything serious. Go out there and do that lip sync Whitney Houston song, collect your coins
and go home and just don't worry about it. That didn't work for me. I'm grateful that my platform was inflated
at the same time as people were beginning
to think very intersectionally,
not only in terms of identity,
but also understanding that race and politics
are infused in entertainment.
Drag queens do have an opinion about these things
as queer folks who are
positioned in a very gender-variant way are often targets of discrimination and all these types of
things. Even if you're just trying to do that lip sync number, it's almost impossible not to
want to deal with those kind of things. Could you talk a little bit more about, like, why it has
been and remains, like, important for you to stay to stay as like politically vocal as you have been
in your art? I mean, I think I'm just born that way at a very early age, knowing that I was
extremely swishy and being constantly corrected. And I just kind of knew that there was something
about me and how I connect with the world that some people see as a threat or wrong.
And so it's not a surprise to me that I'm more engaged in that stuff as an
adult. There's a Susan Stryker, an author, says that queer folks are minorities, are oftentimes
more politically active because we have the least to lose and the most to gain. Feeling that we
needed to be involved in that is certainly a page, especially me being a Black person and a queer
person, a page out of the civil rights era protests and being politically active. Then, of course,
in the 80s with the AIDS epidemic, seeing folks act up how they would engage in their activism
and then fuse art into it. We know that arts and entertainment is where most people are going to
learn. Knowing that, it's really important for me to use my
platform that can reach all those people to talk about the things that queer and trans people,
that black queer trans people can face that they wouldn't have any other opportunity to hear.
You know, there are definitely some gays right now sitting around saying, honey,
I don't care about Roe v. Wade. I'm a gay man.
I can't get pregnant. But when we really take another look at Roe v. Wade as a queer issue as
well, we can't sit down. And so the same thing certainly that we've witnessed when it comes to
conversations about race and the queer community, folks who are disabled, all different religions and any type of way that people can identify is valid and crucial to contributing to the conversation.
I do feel the need to march alongside those people because I'm going to call on them to march alongside us.
Do you feel like there is a need to reintroduce politics to our, broader mainstream understanding of drag in any particular way?
Yes. I think if there's anyone who needs to be reminded that drag is and can and by nature just definitely is political,
it's a lot of the newer performers, which I think eventually you will hopefully naturally come around to that anyway.
I think certainly both for the spectators of drag,
they know it's political because of how it makes them feel. They're like, oh, this is really
interesting and looks a lot of fun, but I know I shouldn't be clapping for this or I know I
shouldn't be looking at this because I've been told it was wrong. Surely that goes through
somebody's head when they're watching a drag show. Absolutely. So we are in this political moment.
You mentioned the over 300 anti-trans, anti-queer bills that are going around in state legislatures. What is keeping you smiling in this tell myself. It's like, yes, it's bad, but it's not going to instant. We're not going to just drop dead instantly. I know that a lot of these things do threaten the livelihood, if not the lives of many individuals. But we will be there the day after to reconvene and figure out what to do.
And I feel like it's my journalistic duty. The Drag Race girls are listening. Would you ever go back on Drag Race?
Yeah, you know, honestly, in all honesty, I would. I have been asked before and I wasn't able to do it because of scheduling. If they, Peppermint, to join us. And I'm looking forward to your return to the main stage so I can be fully Team Peppermint.
Now, what about the tens of thousands of people who do drag in places that aren't considered gay capitals of the world,
like Los Angeles, New York City, and Chicago?
The ones that don't have the platform that Peppermint and many other Ru girls do.
I want you to meet an amazing one, Taylor Alexander, a drag performer based in Atlanta.
Here they are speaking at a vigil for Black trans lives in 2020.
We are in a time where right now we have no choice but to stand up and fight back.
We have no time to be silenced because silence equals violence.
I don't want to have to add more names to a list.
I don't want my family members to be a hashtag. I want my family and people that I don't even know,
I want them to be here to experience life. Silence equals violence. Many of you should
keep that in mind. Y'all should know that Taylor is the co-founder and current executive director of Southern Fried Queer Pride, or as they call it, SFQP.
It's a nonprofit dedicated to empowering Black and brown queer and trans folks in, you guessed it, the South.
So Taylor, thanks so much for joining me because I wanted you to tell the squad about all the kinds of people in your community you've been able to help through drag. I've hosted DIY drag fundraisers
to get girls on hormones,
to get top surgeries for folks.
I've done drag performances in the street
to make sure that some people had rent
to keep a roof over their head.
Every SFQP festival,
there's always one or a group of people
who come up to me or one
of the other organizers and it's just like really really appreciative like to the point of like tears
sometimes and seeing people be seen and be held by community just means the world to me so every
time that i'm able to use my art to benefit somebody else and to create a space that maybe
wasn't there is always something that
I feel incredibly grateful to do. Drag can be so much more than what we have right now. And it's
a beautiful thing. Definitely. Now, the South is, you know, an area where a lot of people associate
conservative political values, a lack of acceptance for queer folks. I'm from South Carolina originally. All right. I went
to school in Atlanta, so I know a little bit of what you're talking about. You've obviously pushed
back on this idea through your work. I wonder if you could tell our listeners a little bit about
how that perception of the South is like maybe a little true, but also maybe not true.
Definitely in certain parts of the South, especially the rural parts, not so much the
more city-based urban areas.
You know, there is this, you know, sense of isolation.
There is this kind of deeper hardship that a lot of LGBTQ rural people face.
But we also have to talk about the amazing communities and people that we have here in
the South.
You know, the Southeast has the largest population
of LGBTQ people in the country.
We have our own riots, our own history, our own icons.
I mean, so many people that are a part of mainstream
queer culture nowadays come from the South.
You know, people like RuPaul herself.
You mentioned Mother Ru, which leads me to ask about,
you know, the ways that we've seen drag kind of become more mainstream.
I think there are a lot of folks who might not readily connect drag to that kind of political organizing history that you talked about already before.
And you were recently on Tuck Woodstock's podcast, Gender Reveal, talking about what y'all called the RuPaul Industrial Complex, which I love.
And how the Drag Race franchise has shaped our mainstream conversations about drag for better and for worse.
I'm wondering if you could walk us through what you mean by that. As somebody who has been doing drag for over 10 years,
who has had several friends who have gotten on the television show
and been through the whole process,
and as somebody who is a working showgirl
here in Atlanta,
having to endure the effect of RuPaul's Drag Race
on our local drag scenes,
I think there are very good things
and there are very bad things.
I think there are really beautiful moments where people are recognizing through Drag Race that drag is multifaceted.
They're understanding that drag is not always sexual.
Especially when we talk about Florida and Texas drafting these terrible legislative bills or whatnot to try to bar children from going to see drag shows. I think drag race has helped broaden people's knowledge and ideas about drag.
Do I think that drag race is feeding the people all the correct information and the most eclectic
and diverse understanding of what drag is?
Absolutely not.
There's not a drag king on drag race.
There's not a political kind of intent on drag race besides like telling people
to vote and then putting Nancy Pelosi up there every five seconds, you know? So it's like...
That paired with the holding of the remember to vote signs at the end of every episode,
that has always read to me as, let's just say, interesting.
But I'm wondering for you,
how do you think we can go about
reminding folks of the
political roots of drag?
I think we just have to be more vocal
and unapologetic about it.
Every time they wheel out that
register to vote sign at the end of Drag Race,
number one, it always feels like an
afterthought. Number two,
we're tired of voting.
It's not giving what it's supposed to give.
I would love for there to be two signs.
If we're going to have registered to vote
at the end of every episode,
let there also be like a get involved locally sign.
Like let's teach people that yes, you can vote,
but you can also do other things
like volunteer for local organizations, not just the nonprofits to get all the grants, like the ones who are actually on the ground affecting change in real queer and trans communities.
I feel like unless there's another major political upheaval in queer and trans issues, which seems like every day now when we're talking about these bills that are being drafted against the lives of trans people and queer kids.
I think the local consumers of drag see that, but it needs to be brought and dialed up like five notches on the national kind of like mainstream television front.
So that's a challenge to RuPaul if you're listening to this.
Get dirty, girl. Get dirty.
I know that's right. I would love to hear what type of advice you might have for young people. Maybe they want to use drag as a political organizing tool. Maybe they want to create their own, you know, queer spaces in their different communities. What advice do you have for the young people? I think if I could go back to 2014 Taylor,
I would remind myself that I had so much power.
I think that, especially for queer and trans youth,
they're kind of taught to kind of just wait
until they're accepted or wait until they get
of a certain age to do something.
And I wish I had told myself when I was younger,
like, you don't have to wait until you're 21, 24 to do something.
You could do it right now.
Sure, it might be messy.
Sure, it might be chaotic.
I mean, who's late teens, early 20s is not chaotic.
But I feel like that kind of speaks to the power of drag,
the power of SFQP.
Southern Pride Queer Pride is that when I first started doing drag,
when we first started SFQP, we were scrappy, just queer kids and artists who didn't know what a
grant was, didn't know how to apply for it, didn't have any major training or understanding in
community organizing or how to produce an event. But when you are surrounded by people who have a
common goal, I think that's
where the magic happens. And so I would just tell anybody that sometimes the dirtiness, the rawness
of what you're creating is the beauty of it all. And that's what's going to get people involved
and really attracted and attached to what you're creating. So don't be afraid to just do it.
Well, thank you so much, Taylor, for inspiring the folks.
WOD Squad, let me wrap up this special takeover I've been doing with this.
Terrence, Peppermint, and Taylor might have different stories about how they've walked through life in their high heels.
But as drag performers, they all carry the legacies of drag queens and trans women of
color like Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, who helped
build the very foundation we stand on today when we talk about LGBTQ plus rights. Those fights are
still going on. We're only halfway through the year and there are countless don't say gay bills
and heaps of anti-trans legislation, especially against trans women and girls, not to mention
attacks against drag queens themselves when they're just trying to teach the babies at drag queen story hours at libraries across the country.
This is not the first time drag has been targeted though, and it certainly won't be the last. But if
we allow history to be our teacher, it's my hope that such a legacy will give us all the strength
we need to keep the fight alive. Now Gideon, I'm going to let you back into the show.
Thanks for demonstrating great allyship by stepping aside.
Did you learn anything?
What didn't I learn is the better question.
I did learn that when corporations do post during Pride Month,
you can be as annoyed with them as you want because they erase all of
the political history that we've talked about and all the importance that we have talked about.
Absolutely.
Yeah, that energy is well placed. But to be an actual good ally, I have an important call out
to make before we go. While Pride Month is coming to a close, there is still time to donate to
Cricut's Pride Fund. We've partnered with three incredible organizations that provide community building,
gender affirming, and life-saving resources to the queer and transgender community
to support their important work. Visit crooked.com slash pride fund to donate and learn more. one more thing before we go a special shout out to my partner in crime for this episode
Raven Yamamoto for putting together our very own drag queen happy hour shout out to you we see each
other love ya that is all for today if you like the show make sure you subscribe leave a review shantae you
stay and tell your friends to listen and if you're into reading and not just the reading list for the
local drag queen story hour like me what a day is also a nightly newsletter check it out and
subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe i'm trevelle anderson i'm gideon resnick and keep
saying gay.
You can say trans too.
Yes.
You can say them all.
You can say all of them.
Unless you're Exxon. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance,
Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran
and me, Gideon Resnick.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.