How 8 queens from 'RuPaul's Drag Race' feel about the songs that sent them packing
The long-brewing tension between Bob the Drag Queen and Derrick Barry finally came to a boil on Monday night’s episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race. The rival queens landed in the bottom two and subsequently lip-synced for their lives to Sylvester’s “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real),” a spectacularly campy lip sync battle the likes of which John Krasinski’s terminally heterosexual Spike show could never hope to replicate.
Anyone who’s watched the eighth season of Drag Race with me knows that I’m far from a Derrick Barry fan. (With every low-key racist mention of Bob’s “ratchet drag,” my eyes roll harder than a Tumblr-wave teen at Coachella.) So I wasn’t super bummed when RuPaul asked her to “sashay away.” But I do have some sympathy for our nation’s foremost Britney Spears impersonator. Imagine having a negative memory permanently attached to a song as amazing as “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real).” Is disco just, like, canceled for you? How do you go on?
To find out, I reached out to some of Drag Race‘s most esteemed alumnae. Here’s what they had to say.
1. Gia Gunn on Lisa Lisa & Cult Jam’s “Head to Toe”
“I hadn’t heard the song before coming to Drag Race. I’m actually a ’90s baby. But when I listen to it now, it’s like a love/hate relationship. It always brings me back to that unforgettable moment of being eliminated. Drag Race was something I worked really hard for, and once I got there I do believe I gave it my all. But you know, it also reminds me of my relationship with Laganja Estranja, who I was lip-syncing against. It’s a happy moment.”
2. Trixie Mattel on Blondie’s “Dreaming” and Robin S’s “Show Me Love”
“I remember feeling certain that I was gonna win that lip sync to Blondie’s ‘Dreaming’ because I love Blondie—they’re my all-time favorite band—and you may as well be put down like a dog if you lose a lip sync to Pearl. But having lost the lip sync, hearing ‘Dreaming’ makes me think of the whole ride of leaving Drag Race and then coming back. The fans were not happy when I was first eliminated, and so the song makes me think of the support I got when I lost.
“‘Show Me Love’ is really hard—it’s not super fun to hear. When it comes on in bars, everyone always cheers, and I’m just like, ‘FUCK EVERYONE!!!!’ I did perform to a mix of ‘Show Me Love’ and ‘Dreaming’ after Drag Race, which helped make the song not as scary or upsetting anymore. That’s sort of like how I got my drag name. ‘Trixie’ was a word my stepfather called me growing up, so I made it my bitch and took back the night. But still, I never need to hear ‘Show Me Love’ again. If I got married, it would be on my ‘do not play’ playlist.”