Drag artist network Qommittee says it's here to stay, despite Trump, GOP
Source: The Hill
05/31/25 6:00 AM ET
A year after launching, Qommittee, a national network of drag artists, says its just getting started. The groups 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 theyre going through it alone and that they dont 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 isnt 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.
Read more: https://thehill.com/homenews/lgbtq/5326138-drag-queens-artist-network-qommittee/
Link to Qommittee HANDBOOK website - The Drag Defense Handbook
Link to HANDBOOK (PDF viewer) - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BDYx-EcwxFr5E04eaE-cmZbRPbC5ACws/view?usp=sharing

k_buddy762
(637 posts)I have lived now for many decades and, other than once or twice on TV, and most recently the internet, I have never seen anyone in drag in my life.
BumRushDaShow
(153,948 posts)People who do this are performers. One wouldn't necessarily see the cast of a Broadway show like "Cats" or "The Lion King" out on the streets "in costume".
It has been mainstreamed more - I expect thanks to RuPaul and his drag competition series.
RuPaul (without costume/makeup)
RuPaul (full costume/makeup)
ProudMNDemocrat
(19,664 posts)That Ru Paul and Sen. Cory Booker are distantly related.
Ru Paul is gorgeous when all decked out. He does not scare me. TACO Don does.
BumRushDaShow
(153,948 posts)
I have never had chance to watch his show (I have only seen snippets) but I know my sisters watch it.
k_buddy762
(637 posts)or a performer in costume other than maybe in a poster or newspaper ad. I remember rupaul from when I was much younger but I don't remember much. In person? Never seen a man in drag that I can remember. Must not be "everywhere."
BumRushDaShow
(153,948 posts)between drag performers or say mimes like Marcel Marceau -
or clowns (whether performing as part of a circus or a troupe or singly at various venues) -
or acrobats, like Cirque du Soleil -
or stilt walkers -
So yes, they ARE "everywhere". You just have to go see them "perform" at some venue like every other type of performer (outside of the street performers playing a sax or guitar out on the sidewalk in many downtowns).
Sometimes it's good to go seek out the experiences yourself and not expect them to come to you.
Hell, every year on New Year's Day, for almost 125 years, Philly has a Mummers Parade, with String Bands, Fancies, and Comics (including what they call the "Wench Brigades" ) -
k_buddy762
(637 posts)I don't do crowds.