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RuPaul Wins Emmy For Outstanding Reality Show Host, Beating Out Steve Harvey

CHANGING THE CHANNEL Aside from her multiple TV (All My Children, Sister, Sister and Sabrina the Teenage Witch) and movie appearances (Spike Lee’s Crooklyn , To Wong Foo Thanks for Everything, The Brady Bunch Movie, A Very Brady Sequel and The Truth About Jane), RuPaul hosted her own VH1 talk show, The RuPaul Show, from 1996 to 1998. Nearly a decade later, LOGO premiered RuPaul’s Drag Race, a reality series that follows 13 contestants around to find “the next superstar drag queen of America.” Now in its fourth season, the show’s rating rose 50% from season three, causing the latest season of RuPaul’s Drag Race to become the highest-rated premiere to air on LOGO in network history. That success led two spin-off shows, RuPaul’s Drag Race: Untucked, which follows the behind-the-scenes cat-fights and drama between queens while the judges mull over their fate; and RuPaul’s Drag U, where drag “professors” transform the style of the everyday woman and help her unleash her “inner diva.”

Drag queen and television personality RuPaul (Andre Charles) won the Emmy for Outstanding Host of a Reality Series for RuPaul’s Drag Race. He beat out American Idol‘s Ryan Seacrest, Dancing With the Stars‘ Tom Bergeron, Hollywood Game Night‘s Jane Lynch, Little Big Shots‘ Steve Harvey and Project Runway‘s Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn for the honor.

“I dedicate this nomination to outsiders everywhere,” RuPaul said in a statement when the nominations were first announced. “Brave souls who, against all odds, stick to their dreams and make the world a more colorful place. On behalf of those people–my tribe–I am so grateful.” But he also gave Vulture the infamous quote that he could care less about mainstream awards: “I’d rather have an enema than an Emmy.” But in a video shot since winning, he accepts his trophy and acknowledges that Emmys and enemas are not mutually exclusive.

RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars Season 2 premiered Aug. 25 on Logo. The reality competition show features 10 previous competitors from RuPaul’s Drag Race vying for a second chance to enter “Drag Race herstory.”

Straight Out of Oz

Much to my pleasant surprise YouTube sensation Todrick Hall joined the judging panel this season. He is a quadruple threat when it comes to his talents in singing, acting, directing, and choreographing his videos. A must-see for anyone who loves theatrical storytelling is the hour-long visual album on YouTube called Straight Outta Oz

 that Hall released this past June (inspired by Beyoncé’s Lemonade). He first rose to prominence as a contestant on the ninth season of American Idol, making it to the semi-finals. Starting Nov. 1, Hall will assume the lead role of Lola in the hit Broadway musical Kinky Boots.

I have been a fan of the 55-year-old RuPaul since he first achieved international fame with the hit song “Supermodel (You Better Work)” in 1993 after he had already become a popular fixture on New York City’s nightclub scene. Before there was Lip Sync Battle, there were drag queens going at it since Logo debuted RuPaul’s Drag Race

, which marked its eighth season this year.  On the All Star show, instead of lip-syncing for their lives (RuPaul’s catchphrase), the drag queens are lip-syncing for their legacy.

Drag vs. Trans Community

Though it has a huge gay following, RuPaul’s Drag Race has been divisive at times among members of the trans community who complained that they were getting ‘confused’ with drag queens. Drag is a form of performance art that involves jumping between different genders and characters. Transgender is used to describe someone whose gender identity differs from the sex the doctor marked on his or her birth certificate. Some past contestants on RuPaul’s show have since come out as transgender such as model Carmen Carrera.

In 2014, the drag competition reality show attracted a barrage of criticism from trans activists for a segment in which contestants were asked to guess from a photo whether someone was a ‘female or she-male.’ Network executives subsequently opted to drop the show’s ‘You’ve Got She-Mail’ catchphrase and Ru signed a sensitivity pledge.

Love him or leave him, RuPaul notably is an unapologetic, openly gay man and over the past eight years his reality show has made inroads in helping spread awareness about tolerance, inclusion, and respect for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.

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