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Drag artist network Qommittee says it's here to stay, despite Trump, GOP
Drag artist network Qommittee says it's here to stay, despite Trump, GOP

The Hill

time21 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Hill

Drag artist network Qommittee says it's here to stay, despite Trump, GOP

A year after launching, Qommittee, a national network of drag artists, says it's just getting started. The group's latest project, issued ahead of Pride, is a 43-page manual called the Drag Defense Handbook, documenting how drag performers, organizers and attorneys across the country have fought state bans and threats of violence and harassment — and won. The guidebook is divided into six sections: crisis response, digital security, First Amendment protections, violent threat response, defamation defense and mental health resources. 'There are drag artists in every single corner of the country, from big cities to small towns. Drag is everywhere, and many artists face terrible challenges like bomb threats and harassment,' said Julian Applebaum, a community organizer in Washington who was part of the team that put the handbook together. 'A common thing that we hear is that they feel like they're going through it alone and that they don't know where to turn or where to look for resources and support.' The document, he said, 'is made by and for the community, so that the next drag artist who gets threatened isn't starting from scratch to figure out how to defend themselves.' In 2023, advocacy organization GLAAD said it recorded more than 160 anti-LGBTQ protests and threats targeting drag events over the past year, including bomb threats and demonstrations led by members of extremist groups. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a nonprofit researching extremism and disinformation, tracked more than 200 instances of anti-drag hate from 2022 to 2023, led by 'growing numbers' of individuals affiliated with white supremacist, parents' rights and Christian nationalist organizations. Freddie Hercury, a drag king in Buffalo, N.Y., and a peer support organizer with Qommittee (pronounced 'committee'), said they found the group last June after receiving a bomb threat on Facebook ahead of a performance in nearby Niagara Falls. 'I was really, like, unsure how to react to it, and I felt very much like I didn't want to overblow it,' Hercury said. 'Qommittee had just launched, and I had just recently seen their posts on Instagram, and I was like, you know, I'm just gonna give this a try. It couldn't hurt, and maybe they'll help me through this,' they said. 'And they were infinitely more helpful than I could have ever imagined they would be.' Organizers with the group, which has dozens of volunteers nationwide, called Hercury almost immediately. 'They were truly validating to me. Their main focus was really just making me feel like I was doing what I needed to do to be safe,' they said. After Qommittee members walked Hercury through their options, they reported the threat to the FBI, and their gig went off without a hitch. Now, they help other performers navigate similar situations. Jack King Goff, another peer support organizer and drag artist performing predominantly in the Seattle area, said they were harassed online and forced to leave their job as a high school English teacher last year after a student scrolled through more than 10 years of tagged photos on Goff's personal Instagram page and uploaded pictures of them in drag to a cyberbullying account. The photos caught the attention of a local Moms for Liberty chapter member and a conservative podcast host, and the widespread attention on their personal life gave way to death threats and targeted harassment, even from students, Goff said. The Washington state teachers' union eventually told Goff it couldn't guarantee their physical safety, and it may be time to reconsider their career. 'That really sucked,' Goff said in a recent interview. 'I doubt I'll ever be hired by a public school ever again because I'm too controversial as a candidate.' Now living with their parents in their native Los Angeles, Goff is working on developing their drag career. They're also volunteering with Qommittee, with whom they were in touch when the backlash against their drag king persona first started. 'The biggest part of it is helping people realize that they are not alone,' they said. 'And it's important that people know work is happening.' The current political climate around LGBTQ Americans, particularly transgender rights, makes that work all the more critical, Goff said. President Trump and administration officials have called trans and gender-nonconforming identities 'falsehoods' and equated them with deception and lies. During his first hours back in office, Trump signed an executive order proclaiming the U.S. recognizes only two sexes, male and female, and broadly restricting federal support for 'gender ideology.' He's also signed orders to bar transgender people from serving in the military, ban trans girls from competing in girls' sports, slash funding for LGBTQ health research and end federal support for gender-affirming care for minors, treatment the administration has described with inflammatory rhetoric such as 'castration' and 'mutilation.' He's also taken explicit aim at drag. In announcing his decision to take over the Kennedy Center in February, Trump wrote on Truth Social that drag performances at the cultural center, particularly those targeted at young audiences, 'will stop.' 'NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA — ONLY THE BEST,' he wrote in another post announcing Ric Grenell as the institution's interim executive director. In February, two days after Trump said he would install himself as chair, a petition launched by Qommittee called on the Kennedy Center's donors to suspend funding and reroute support to 'banned or censored artists,' including drag performers. Roughly 55,000 people signed on, said Blaq Dynamite, a Washington-based drag king and Qommittee's president. 'That kind of response kind of tells us that we're going in the right direction,' he said. For Dynamite, living and performing in Trump's backyard is something he and other members of Washington's LGBTQ community are aware of daily. 'Hairs are definitely standing up a little more,' he said. 'We're definitely aware of the shadow that we work in, that we operate in.' 'Things that are going on in the White House are so sporadic that we just don't know what's going to happen week to week,' he added. 'But we, the queer community, especially the drag community, are prepared to do what we have to do.' Dynamite said his vision for Qommittee is to grow the organization 'organically' through mutual aid efforts that foster community building. 'I don't want this to seem commercial, you know, like a Sally Struthers kind of thing — 'for just five cents a day, you, too, can sponsor a drag queen,'' he said. 'I want this to be something that is steered by the people that it helps.'

‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay
‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay

A year after launching, Qommittee, a national network of drag artists, says it's just getting started. The group's latest project, issued ahead of Pride, is a 43-page manual called the Drag Defense Handbook, documenting how drag performers, organizers and attorneys across the country have fought state bans and threats of violence and harassment — and won. The guidebook is divided into six sections: crisis response, digital security, First Amendment protections, violent threat response, defamation defense and mental health resources. 'There are drag artists in every single corner of the country, from big cities to small towns. Drag is everywhere, and many artists face terrible challenges like bomb threats and harassment,' said Julian Applebaum, a community organizer in Washington who was part of the team that put the handbook together. 'A common thing that we hear is that they feel like they're going through it alone and that they don't know where to turn or where to look for resources and support.' The document, he said, 'is made by and for the community, so that the next drag artist who gets threatened isn't starting from scratch to figure out how to defend themselves.' In 2023, advocacy organization GLAAD said it recorded more than 160 anti-LGBTQ protests and threats targeting drag events over the past year, including bomb threats and demonstrations led by members of extremist groups. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a nonprofit researching extremism and disinformation, tracked more than 200 instances of anti-drag hate from 2022 to 2023, led by 'growing numbers' of individuals affiliated with white supremacist, parents' rights and Christian nationalist organizations. Freddie Hercury, a drag king in Buffalo, N.Y., and a peer support organizer with Qommittee (pronounced 'committee'), said they found the group last June after receiving a bomb threat on Facebook ahead of a performance in nearby Niagara Falls. 'I was really, like, unsure how to react to it, and I felt very much like I didn't want to overblow it,' Hercury said. 'Qommittee had just launched, and I had just recently seen their posts on Instagram, and I was like, you know, I'm just gonna give this a try. It couldn't hurt, and maybe they'll help me through this,' they said. 'And they were infinitely more helpful than I could have ever imagined they would be.' Organizers with the group, which has dozens of volunteers nationwide, called Hercury almost immediately. 'They were truly validating to me. Their main focus was really just making me feel like I was doing what I needed to do to be safe,' they said. After Qommittee members walked Hercury through their options, they reported the threat to the FBI, and their gig went off without a hitch. Now, they help other performers navigate similar situations. Jack King Goff, another peer support organizer and drag artist performing predominantly in the Seattle area, said they were harassed online and forced to leave their job as a high school English teacher last year after a student scrolled through more than 10 years of tagged photos on Goff's personal Instagram page and uploaded pictures of them in drag to a cyberbullying account. The photos caught the attention of a local Moms for Liberty chapter member and a conservative podcast host, and the widespread attention on their personal life gave way to death threats and targeted harassment, even from students, Goff said. The Washington state teachers' union eventually told Goff it couldn't guarantee their physical safety, and it may be time to reconsider their career. 'That really sucked,' Goff said in a recent interview. 'I doubt I'll ever be hired by a public school ever again because I'm too controversial as a candidate.' Now living with their parents in their native Los Angeles, Goff is working on developing their drag career. They're also volunteering with Qommittee, with whom they were in touch when the backlash against their drag king persona first started. 'The biggest part of it is helping people realize that they are not alone,' they said. 'And it's important that people know work is happening.' The current political climate around LGBTQ Americans, particularly transgender rights, makes that work all the more critical, Goff said. President Trump and administration officials have called trans and gender-nonconforming identities 'falsehoods' and equated them with deception and lies. During his first hours back in office, Trump signed an executive order proclaiming the U.S. recognizes only two sexes, male and female, and broadly restricting federal support for 'gender ideology.' He's also signed orders to bar transgender people from serving in the military, ban trans girls from competing in girls' sports, slash funding for LGBTQ health research and end federal support for gender-affirming care for minors, treatment the administration has described with inflammatory rhetoric such as 'castration' and 'mutilation.' He's also taken explicit aim at drag. In announcing his decision to take over the Kennedy Center in February, Trump wrote on Truth Social that drag performances at the cultural center, particularly those targeted at young audiences, 'will stop.' 'NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA — ONLY THE BEST,' he wrote in another post announcing Ric Grenell as the institution's interim executive director. In February, two days after Trump said he would install himself as chair, a petition launched by Qommittee called on the Kennedy Center's donors to suspend funding and reroute support to 'banned or censored artists,' including drag performers. Roughly 55,000 people signed on, said Blaq Dynamite, a Washington-based drag king and Qommittee's president. 'That kind of response kind of tells us that we're going in the right direction,' he said. For Dynamite, living and performing in Trump's backyard is something he and other members of Washington's LGBTQ community are aware of daily. 'Hairs are definitely standing up a little more,' he said. 'We're definitely aware of the shadow that we work in, that we operate in.' 'Things that are going on in the White House are so sporadic that we just don't know what's going to happen week to week,' he added. 'But we, the queer community, especially the drag community, are prepared to do what we have to do.' Dynamite said his vision for Qommittee is to grow the organization 'organically' through mutual aid efforts that foster community building. 'I don't want this to seem commercial, you know, like a Sally Struthers kind of thing — 'for just five cents a day, you, too, can sponsor a drag queen,'' he said. 'I want this to be something that is steered by the people that it helps.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay
‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay

The Hill

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Hill

‘Drag is everywhere': Artist network Qommittee is sashaying to stay

A year after launching, Qommittee, a national network of drag artists, says it's just getting started. The group's latest project, issued ahead of Pride, is a 43-page manual called the Drag Defense Handbook, documenting how drag performers, organizers and attorneys across the country have fought state bans and threats of violence and harassment — and won. The guidebook is divided into six sections: crisis response, digital security, First Amendment protections, violent threat response, defamation defense and mental health resources. 'There are drag artists in every single corner of the country, from big cities to small towns. Drag is everywhere, and many artists face terrible challenges like bomb threats and harassment,' said Julian Applebaum, a community organizer in Washington who was part of the team that put the handbook together. 'A common thing that we hear is that they feel like they're going through it alone and that they don't know where to turn or where to look for resources and support.' The document, he said, 'is made by and for the community, so that the next drag artist who gets threatened isn't starting from scratch to figure out how to defend themselves.' In 2023, advocacy organization GLAAD said it recorded more than 160 anti-LGBTQ protests and threats targeting drag events over the past year, including bomb threats and demonstrations led by members of extremist groups. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a nonprofit researching extremism and disinformation, tracked more than 200 instances of anti-drag hate from 2022 to 2023, led by 'growing numbers' of individuals affiliated with white supremacist, parents' rights and Christian nationalist organizations. Freddie Hercury, a drag king in Buffalo, N.Y., and a peer support organizer with Qommittee (pronounced 'committee'), said they found the group last June after receiving a bomb threat on Facebook ahead of a performance in nearby Niagara Falls. 'I was really, like, unsure how to react to it, and I felt very much like I didn't want to overblow it,' Hercury said. 'Qommittee had just launched, and I had just recently seen their posts on Instagram, and I was like, you know, I'm just gonna give this a try. It couldn't hurt, and maybe they'll help me through this,' they said. 'And they were infinitely more helpful than I could have ever imagined they would be.' Organizers with the group, which has dozens of volunteers nationwide, called Hercury almost immediately. 'They were truly validating to me. Their main focus was really just making me feel like I was doing what I needed to do to be safe,' they said. After Qommittee members walked Hercury through their options, they reported the threat to the FBI, and their gig went off without a hitch. Now, they help other performers navigate similar situations. Jack King Goff, another peer support organizer and drag artist performing predominantly in the Seattle area, said they were harassed online and forced to leave their job as a high school English teacher last year after a student scrolled through more than 10 years of tagged photos on Goff's personal Instagram page and uploaded pictures of them in drag to a cyberbullying account. The photos caught the attention of a local Moms for Liberty chapter member and a conservative podcast host, and the widespread attention on their personal life gave way to death threats and targeted harassment, even from students, Goff said. The Washington state teachers' union eventually told Goff it couldn't guarantee their physical safety, and it may be time to reconsider their career. 'That really sucked,' Goff said in a recent interview. 'I doubt I'll ever be hired by a public school ever again because I'm too controversial as a candidate.' Now living with their parents in their native Los Angeles, Goff is working on developing their drag career. They're also volunteering with Qommittee, with whom they were in touch when the backlash against their drag king persona first started. 'The biggest part of it is helping people realize that they are not alone,' they said. 'And it's important that people know work is happening.' The current political climate around LGBTQ Americans, particularly transgender rights, makes that work all the more critical, Goff said. President Trump and administration officials have called trans and gender-nonconforming identities 'falsehoods' and equated them with deception and lies. During his first hours back in office, Trump signed an executive order proclaiming the U.S. recognizes only two sexes, male and female, and broadly restricting federal support for 'gender ideology.' He's also signed orders to bar transgender people from serving in the military, ban trans girls from competing in girls' sports, slash funding for LGBTQ health research and end federal support for gender-affirming care for minors, treatment the administration has described with inflammatory rhetoric such as 'castration' and 'mutilation.' He's also taken explicit aim at drag. In announcing his decision to take over the Kennedy Center in February, Trump wrote on Truth Social that drag performances at the cultural center, particularly those targeted at young audiences, 'will stop.' 'NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA — ONLY THE BEST,' he wrote in another post announcing Ric Grenell as the institution's interim executive director. In February, two days after Trump said he would install himself as chair, a petition launched by Qommittee called on the Kennedy Center's donors to suspend funding and reroute support to 'banned or censored artists,' including drag performers. Roughly 55,000 people signed on, said Blaq Dynamite, a Washington-based drag king and Qommittee's president. 'That kind of response kind of tells us that we're going in the right direction,' he said. For Dynamite, living and performing in Trump's backyard is something he and other members of Washington's LGBTQ community are aware of daily. 'Hairs are definitely standing up a little more,' he said. 'We're definitely aware of the shadow that we work in, that we operate in.' 'Things that are going on in the White House are so sporadic that we just don't know what's going to happen week to week,' he added. 'But we, the queer community, especially the drag community, are prepared to do what we have to do.' Dynamite said his vision for Qommittee is to grow the organization 'organically' through mutual aid efforts that foster community building. 'I don't want this to seem commercial, you know, like a Sally Struthers kind of thing — 'for just five cents a day, you, too, can sponsor a drag queen,'' he said. 'I want this to be something that is steered by the people that it helps.'

What does the 'Q' stand for in LGBTQ+? How the community reclaimed the word.
What does the 'Q' stand for in LGBTQ+? How the community reclaimed the word.

USA Today

time5 days ago

  • General
  • USA Today

What does the 'Q' stand for in LGBTQ+? How the community reclaimed the word.

What does the 'Q' stand for in LGBTQ+? How the community reclaimed the word. Show Caption Hide Caption San Francisco Pride faces shortfall as corporate sponsors pull out Several major companies have opted out of donating to San Francisco Pride this year, such as Anheuser-Busch, Diageo, Nissan, and Comcast. Pride Month is almost here, so it's important to refresh your knowledge on the flags, terms, identities and history encompassed in the LGBTQ+ community. Asking your LGBTQ+ friends and family is an option but be mindful of placing the burden of your education on others when there are many free resources at your disposal. Here's what you need to know about the letter "Q" in the acronym. What does the 'Q' in LGBTQ+ stand for? The Q in LGBTQ+ stands for queer in most settings, but it can also mean questioning. LGBTQ+ is an acronym of identities related to sexual orientation and gender identity. What each letter in LGBTQ+ means: In recent years, many have added I and A (intersex and asexual) to the lineup. The plus sign is another addition to the acronym to represent identities in the community that perhaps don't fit into the other letters like pansexual, polyamorous, Two-Spirit or others who don't want to label their sexuality. What does queer mean? Queer is an adjective used by those who are not exclusively heterosexual. The term is often used as a self-identifier for those who don't feel their sexuality fits into other terms like lesbian, gay or bisexual. Many LGBTQ+ individuals feel some labels are "too limiting and/or fraught with cultural connotations they feel do not apply to them," GLAAD writes. Learn them all: History and meaning of each letter in LGBTQ+ Reclaiming the word For many, reclaiming words that were once used as offensive or controversial is an empowering practice. For others, using that word is a painful reminder of the past. The first documented use of queer as a slur was in 1894 when John Douglas, the 9th Marquess of Queensberry, discovered his son was in a relationship with Oscar Wilde. "Snob Queers" was used as a derogatory term to describe gay men in a lengthy court case brought on by Douglas. Flipping the term on its head, protesters in the midst of the AIDS epidemic began using the word queer in chants: "We're here, we're queer, we're not going shopping!" and "We're here, we're queer, get used to it!" In 1990, activist organization Queer Nation was founded with a mission to increase visibility and decrease LGBTQ+ violence. Queer Nation mobilized protests, hung banners and distributed pamphlets that read "We're here, we're queer and we'd like to say hello!" Widespread use grew from there. GLAAD officially added the Q to the acronym in its resource guide in 2016. Younger LGBTQ+ Americans in particular are reclaiming the word as they embrace a shift toward fluidity in identity. But it's still important to keep in mind that some members of the LGBTQ+ community, particularly older ones who grew up hearing it as a slur, might be uncomfortable with it. The bottom line? Let your friends self-identify; Don't try to use a label for them. Is it OK to use the word queer?: LGBTQ folks share perspectives, history of language What does 'questioning' mean? According to GLAAD, questioning is an adjective used to describe the process of exploring sexual orientation and gender identity. It's sometimes used as the Q in LGBTQ+ in youth support settings. Advocacy organization PFLAG puts it this way: "They have a feeling they might be different but are still in a process of exploration. Using the term allows them to identify themselves as part of the community, while avoiding labels and still honoring that they are in a process of self-identification." Self-identification is an important part of any LGBTQ+ person's journey. It's important to remember when talking to friends who are questioning that they do not owe an explanation of their sexuality to anyone, and should feel comfortable to explore it in their own time and way.

What are the colors of the pansexual flag? Get to know the Pride flag's meaning, history
What are the colors of the pansexual flag? Get to know the Pride flag's meaning, history

USA Today

time23-05-2025

  • General
  • USA Today

What are the colors of the pansexual flag? Get to know the Pride flag's meaning, history

What are the colors of the pansexual flag? Get to know the Pride flag's meaning, history Show Caption Hide Caption Pride flag colors, explained: Meanings behind the rainbow colors The rainbow Pride flag has become a symbol for the LGBTQ+ community. Here's how the flag came to be and what its colors represent. Have you heard of the term "pansexual" before? Pansexuality refers to someone attracted to all people no matter their gender identity. The term has become an increasingly large part of our culture lexicon in recent years, and with prominence comes the propensity for misconceptions. Here's a look at the pansexual flag and its history. What do the colors of the pansexual flag mean? The pansexual flag has three horizontal stripes, and each color has a different meaning: Hot pink: Represents attraction to women Yellow: Represents nonbinary attraction Blue: Represents attraction to men LGBTQ glossary: Definitions every good ally should know History of the pansexual Pride flag The pansexual pride flag was created around 2010 to "bring awareness to the community," according to the Human Rights Campaign. The flag was designed to help further distinguish pansexuality from bisexuality. 'It's a very fluid thing': What your pansexual friend wishes you knew Is pansexuality different than bisexuality? Pansexuality and bisexuality are not interchangeable words. Bisexuality does broadly describe attraction to more than one gender, while pansexuality is attraction regardless of gender. However, the two terms occasionally overlap in nuanced ways and are entirely personal to the individual who identifies with them. "Pan is more about all-inclusive, and bi tends to be more than one," GLAAD CEO Sarah Kate Ellis previously told USA TODAY, adding, "The golden rule, honestly, is to call someone by how they identify."

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