Awesome! My local paper did a whole big write-up and there is a huge viewing party at the club where she works. I am most confused about drag pronouns, because he is pretty clear that he does not identify as a woman, and that Pandora is a role, but that Pandora is a woman, if that makes any sense.
Riley ,'Potential'
Non-Fiction TV: I Reject Your Reality and Substitute My Own
This thread is for non-fiction TV, including but not limited to reality television (So You Think You Can Dance, Top Chef: Masters, Project Runway), documentaries (The History Channel, The Discovery Channel), and sundry (Expedition Africa, Mythbusters), et al. [NAFDA]
My best understanding is that in drag = she. Not in drag = he or she, depending on how the person identifies.
I'm sure Tep or meara or someone else will come correct me if I'm wrong.
Sure - the character is a lady, the performer is not.
Thank you.
(I just meant it makes sense to me, not that that's the "right" answer...)
Sweet! The hotel my sales rep recommended in Fort Worth is right near Tim Love's Love Shack. Mmmmm, burgers...
What, no PR?
I watched! But I was still flailing from Supernatural, so I wasn't up to posting.
I love it when they do a challenge like this, and I loved that not one of them bitched about working with someone other than a size 2 model.
I thought Mila's dress was a standout from the sketch stage, but I loved Amy's, too. They're really pulling ahead in terms of talent this season.
I think when Kors says, "Taste can't be taught," it's always the death knell. And god, Jesus' dress was a nightmare.
I love it when they do a challenge like this, and I loved that not one of them bitched about working with someone other than a size 2 model.
No one literally bitched, but many of them talked about the "challenge", which to me was code for bitching.
I think when Kors says, "Taste can't be taught," it's always the death knell. And god, Jesus' dress was a nightmare.
the second I saw the rhinestones, I knew that he was done. It could have been okay without the rhinestones. I also worry about the taste level of the client for liking the dress.
I liked the one that didn't use the bright red, used a darker red with the red accents underneath. Actually, I didn't like the dress, just the color scheme.
I thought that the guy who changed his dress from the Grecian-style draping to his one style did a good job.
I did like Mila's dress better than the winner, just because she was really thinking differently than everyone else. Yes, it could have looked pretty tacky with those big stars, but it came out terrific.