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Trinity be like “The show was built on men transforming into women so changing that would take it away the original meaning of the show”
ok, so… lets pretend these runway looks never happened:



lets pretend that on season 7 we didnt have a bearded and a “half man half woman” runway


lets pretend that Kennedy didnt win snatch game portraying a man and Violet didnt win the “born naked” challenge by giving “boy body”


lets pretend that on season one LITERALLY HAD A CHALLENGE WHERE THE DRAG QUEENS TOOK WOMEN WHO WERE FIGHTERS AND HAD MORE “MASCULINE”STYLE AND PUT THEM IN DRAG,

on SEASON ONE.
BYE
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Si vas a entrar a mi vida, apaga la luz y ven a dormir conmigo.
Giorgiano Alfaro Mansilla (via giorgianolml)
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you’d think I’d be ok by now but plot twist I still want to die !
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aprendí que darle importancia a lo lindo, a lo bello, no es ser frívolo. para muchos puede sonar superficial pero a mi me llena de placer algo bello, algo que con solo mirarlo me haga sonreír.
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At any point, it feels as if Gaga will ride into the sunset with a flaming skull in one hand and liberty of justice in the other. Never fear Queen Gaga is here to solve all of your problems, with the looks of these tee’s she’ll probably turn your mortal enemy into a punching bag. Get them HERE!
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In the case of Miranda Hobbes vs. silly women everywhere, the verdict was in. Guilty as charged.
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Photography by Ryan Pfluger in New York on September 3, 2015.
RuPaul’s Drag Race may have given Miss Fame global exposure, but the season 7 contestant was never meant to be bound to the confines of a reality show. Born Kurtis Dam-Mikkelsen, Fame’s moniker doubles as a self-fulfilling prophecy: a brand name built on the assurance that her artistry and notoriety would crack the mainstream. The self-proclaimed “Rolls Royce of Drag,” Fame is seeing her dreams come true, becoming the first drag model to appear in Elle magazine, serving as a makeup consultant on major news networks, and boasting a peerless ability to paint and transform herself (even other queens want the “Fame face”). Yet despite her striking success story she still has humility in her blood, inspiring others as both a queer celebrity and an openly recovered addict. Among her own heroes is another “Miss”: Miss Jane Nelson, her high school art teacher. “She had my back and was a positive influence who pushed me to be creative,” Fame says. “I learned from her and want to contribute to others’ lives in my own way.”
(x)
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