anansi ([identity profile] anansie-s.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] drag_race2010-05-01 04:32 pm

the race accusation

Just thought I'd share an article about some of the things being said.



Source

Stop This Meme: RuPaul is not "Racist" for his "Drag Race" Winning Pick

by Brent Hartinger
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This has to stop.

On Monday, RuPaul revealed the winner of the second season of his RuPaul's Drag Race reality TV show, and it turned out to be Tyra Sanchez.

The choice was controversial. A sizable number of viewers were rooting for the quick-witted Pandora Boxx , who had been eliminated earlier in the season, but who won the Miss Congeniality Award in the reunion show ("by a landslide," RuPaul said).

Others thought plucky, amiable Jujubee would have made a better "Next Drag Superstar," or even foul-mouthed, but always flawlessly-executed Raven.

There are plenty of good reasons to second-guess the actual pick, but racism on the part of RuPaul isn't one of them.

But weirdly, that is precisely what a disturbing number of people are saying, on the Drag Race Facebook page and even here in the comments at AfterElton.com.

What's the evidence? Despite selecting multi-racial casts this year and last, RuPaul's eventual winners, Sanchez and last year's Bebe Zahara Benet, were both black.

Accusing someone of racism is one of the most serious accusations you can make about a person — or so conservatives have been reminding us for the last thirty years.

We are in the era of Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, and Sarah Palin, and now that we have a black president, conservatives seem to have forgotten restraint; high-profile cable and talk radio commenters openly and repeatedly accuse Barack Obama and many blacks of racism and "hatred" against white people, but — Beck's genuinely paranoid delusions aside — I suspect this has more to do with making a "dog whistle" appeal to a Republican base that still includes many racists, while undercutting and de-legitimizing the whole notion of "racism" in general. Tit for tat and all that.

I'm not sure what motivates the ridiculous charge against RuPaul, except to say I think the accusation itself is a form of racism and, intended or not, it makes a mockery of the whole concept of racism.

To my 2010 mind, prejudice, whether it's against blacks or gays, boils down to this: two different sets of rules, one for the majority, one for the minority: when straight couples walk down the street holding hands, they're just sweetly in love, but when gay couples do it, they're "flaunting their sexuality" and being "provocative."

Or when rich, white Americans are required to buy health insurance, it's a full-fledged, Tea Party-crazed Constitutional crisis, but when police are allowed by the Arizona government to demand "papers" from virtually all hispanic people, well, you gotta break a few Constitutional eggs to make an omelet, right?

In other words, rather than a presumption of innocence, there's a presumption of guilt. And if you think that's a small difference, you know nothing about the history of human beings.

Because RuPaul picked two African Americans in a row as winners of his reality show, an accusation is being made about his motives that would never be made about a white host of a reality show who picked two white winners in a row. Indeed, how many white reality shows have done exactly that?

Presumption of innocence for the white person, presumption of guilt for the black one. This is literally what racism is, despite attempts by Sarah Palin and Glenn Beck to muddy the term all up.

I could quote passages from RuPaul's latest book, Workin' It! RuPaul's Guide to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Style, that indicate very clearly where his heart is on the issue of racism and even white-inclusiveness. But you know what? That would imply he somehow needs defending, even against baseless, scurrilous charges such as these.

He doesn't.

Let it go. Disagree with RuPaul all you want — just don't resort to vile racial doublespeak to do it.

*--*

On a more pleasant note --- have some Martha Wash and RuPaul:


[identity profile] kapvik.livejournal.com 2010-05-03 10:16 am (UTC)(link)
I agree that calling Tyra's win racially motivated is incorrect. Because it's not so much that "another black drag queen" won, but rather "another drag queen who is inordinately similar to RuPaul herself" won.

Personally I just feel "cheated" in a way because this competition turned out to be something completely different than what I saw it as last year. In Season 1 I genuinely bought the line that it was about whoever had the best charisma, uniqueness, nerve, and talent because Bebe (who has all four qualities and was an admirable contestant in all aspects) won. This year, Tyra - who is UNT, and arguagly just UN - won, because it's actually about finding the next drag supermodel, rather than an all-around drag superstar.

They snuck that one past us because Bebe is also great on the runway, on top of being awesome in plenty of other ways. With Tyra (whose only major "talent" is walking the runway) winning, the true standards of the competition are now much more obvious. And it's a fucking letdown.

[identity profile] kapvik.livejournal.com 2010-05-03 10:25 am (UTC)(link)
PS: One of the anti-Santino comments on the source page is awesome.

"Santino honey? When you dress every day of your life like a junkie pimp you have a hell of a nerve saying someone else looks like a coke whore."

[identity profile] purlewe.livejournal.com 2010-05-03 02:02 pm (UTC)(link)
THIS is exactly how I feel about Santino. His style os so assinine that it is calling the kettle black.

[identity profile] purlewe.livejournal.com 2010-05-03 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree. I feel like last season was about all of the qualities of finding new talent in the drag world and giving them a chance to shine... this season was about the drama, which is one of the things that turns me off about the land of reality tv. I get that they are working with a a type of show that has a pretty standard formula.. but they kinda broke the mold and used several formulas last yr. This yr it was all about the formula, the drama, and the hate... which made me only route harder for the girls who were funny, nice, or at least honest about their passive aggressive habits (juju, I'm looking at you.)