Final Project Update: Week 9

Asian American Drag Queens in RuPaul’s Drag Race

Background

The TV-show RuPaul’s Drag Race has become a pop culture phenomenon in the United States. In 2018, it received 12 major nominations and won 6 Emmy awards in Emmy Awards. However, up to the present time, only 13 Asian American drag queens, out of about 140 drag queens, are in that TV show.

Among few Asian American drag queens in this show, Kim Chi, whose ethnicity is Korean, is one of the famous Asian drag queens and is a runner-up in season 8. She is the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television. She takes cultural cues that are currently popular in Korea and represent them into the gay community. It was one of her strengths in this competition. I’d like to explore how Asian Americans drag queens integrate their Asian cultures into the performance in a good way, sometimes in a bad, as part of their identity.

Definition

What is Pop Culture?
As I mentioned in the introduction, RuPaul’s Drag Race has been seen as an important pop culture in the United States. However, how do we categorize that TV show as a pop culture? To begin with, what is pop culture?

According to John Storey, there are 6 definitions of pop culture in their different, general ways. The first definition is that “popular culture is simply culture which is widely favored or well-liked by many people” (4). The second definition is that “popular culture is a residual category, there to accommodate texts and practices which fail to meet the required standards to qualify as high culture” (5). The third definition is that “popular culture is a hopelessly commercial culture. It is mass produced for mass consumption. Its audience is a mass of non-discriminating consumers” (6). It is mass culture. The fourth definition is that  “popular culture is the culture which originates from ‘the people’” (7). The fifth definition is that “popular culture as a site of struggle between the ‘resistance’ of subordinate groups and the forces of ‘incorporation’ operating in the interests of dominant groups” (8). The sixth definition is that in postmodernism, popular culture is “a culture which no longer recognizes the distinction between high and popular culture” (9).

Also, according to Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu, “It is through culture, and particularly popular culture, that persons are taught how to be kinds of citizens— how to dress, listen, shop, love, desire, and behave” (8). It could be also a definition of popular culture because the culture that has effects on us, on our lives is popular culture.

 

So, how do we categorize RuPaul’s Drag Race as a pop culture?

Because RuPaul’s Drag Race received 12 major nominations and won 6 Emmy Awards, it could be said to be widely favored or well-liked by many people, like the first definition.

Also, RuPaul’s Drag Race could be placed in the fourth and fifth definitions. Originally, drag shows and drag queens are part of the LGBTQ community, queer culture. RuPaul’s Drag Race is rooted in queer culture. However, now it’s widely known not only by the LGBTQ community but also by outside of the LGBTQ community, whichever they favor it or not. And now, it can be one of the educational tools of queer studies and gender studies. It represents the diversity of gender and sexuality, which is related to the last definition by Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu.

 

Asian Drag Queens

In this section, I’d like to analyze Asian American drag queens’ performance in RuPaul’s Drag Race.

Kim Chi
Kim Chi is a Korean American drag queen from RuPaul’s Drag Race, season 8. Her real name is Sang-Young Shin (신상영). She (/He) was born in the United States, moved to South Korea and lived there as a child and now lives in Chicago. She became the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television.

This clip shows her performances on RuPaul’s Drag Race season 8. She was one of the top three finalists in that season. Even though she was not good at dancing, her overall talent and fantastical outfits amazed the judges many times.

“Featuring in the show as its first Korean contestant was a great honor. I’ve always been proud of being a Korean and Korean culture, which I think is extremely beautiful. That’s the reason why I named my stage persona as Kim Chi — to promote Korea,” Kim Chi told the Korean Herald during a recent interview in Seoul (Dam-Yong). As she said, she uses a lot of K-pop themes in her performance and also actually represented Korean culture in the show on season 8.

This is one of her clothes from season 8. She expressed her mother’s looks with Korean traditional clothes for women, the Hanbok.

 

This is her performance in the final of season 8. She performed her song, “Fat, Fem & Asian,” in a contemporary version of a Hanbok, which was pretty gorgeous.  Also, some of the lyrics are in Korean.

Analysis
“If you can’t love yourself, how in the hell you gonna love somebody else?” It’s one of the most famous RuPaul’s lines. As her line, the TV show RuPaul’s Drag Race has long been concerned with self-love and non-conformity. RuPaul always expects the participants to represent themselves through their performances. I thought that her performance achieved Ru’s expectations and reproduced her identity and culture as being Asian in a good way.
Also, in her original lip-sync song, she mentions being fat, feminine, and Asian, which are seen as deficient in the gay community. It could show us that she took her weak points as herself and overcame these. But also, it shows being fat, feminine, and Asian are not unattractive, but actually attractive. Through her performance, I thought that she proved it.

 

Even the purpose of this show is to express themselves and themselves as more feminized, C. Winter Han, an associate professor of sociology at Middlebury College, said in the interview that “the Asian characters were heavily racialized in ways that the other contestants weren’t, and more importantly, the show rewarded the Asian contestants the more they Orientalized themselves” (Kornhaber). Some Asian American participants were misrepresenting their identity and culture in the show. I’d like to analyze some of them in the following.

Manila Luzon
Manila Luzon is a Filipino American drag queen from season 3 and All-Stars 1 and 3. Her real name is Karl Philip Michael Westerberg. She was a runner up in season 3. She was born in Minnesota and lives in Los Angeles. Her mother was born in the Philippines. Her drag name, “Manila Luzon,” comes from the capital city “Manila” and the largest island “Luzon” in the Philippines. She chose Manila Luzon because She wanted to celebrate her Filipino heritage.

 

Since she came back to All-Stars twice and won the main challenges in the show many times, she is a very talented drag queen. Actually, she made the judges laugh with her sense of humor and her clothes were so beautiful.

However, in season 3, there was a problematic performance. In episode 5, the main challenge was to be newscasters. Manila Luzon performed with a stereotypically pan-Asian accent. Also, in another episode, she wore a cheongsam, which was not directly related to her Asian heritage, for the challenge. These performances amazed the judges and she won those challenges.

After this season, other Asian American drag queens also did similar things.

Gia Gunn
One example is Gia Gunn, who is Japanese American and was in season 6 and All-Stars 4. She used an Asian accent in the same way that Manila Luzon did. In snatch game, in which contestants showcase their best celebrity impersonations in a game show setting, of All-Stars 4, Gia Gunn turned in an off-color performance as Jenny Bui, who is Cardi B’s Insta-famous nail technician. The above clip has a part of Gia Gunn’s performances as Jenny Bui. In the beginning, Gia Gunn said “Harro Ru! Konichiwa!” and kept speaking in very stereotypical Asia-ness accent. After the episode, Jenny Bui posted on Instagram, “Unfortunately that’s not my accent, and the only thing off the boat is the ‘fresh’ tilapia that you are allegedly serving.” Plus, in the show, Gia Gunn said that “I don’t know that much about Jenny.”

Plastique Tiara
Another example is Plastique Tiara, who is Vietnamese American, and was on season 11, which is the latest season. This clip is the challenge of the parody film in episode 2. In this challenge, she used a stereotypical Asian-like accent as a part of her Asian identity and she was admired by the judges. However, even after this challenge, she continued to use a stereotypical Asian-like accent again and again, since the judges liked her performance of the Asian accent in the first challenge, which was funny.

Analysis
Since Manila Luzon represented Asian culture in ways such as Chinese traditional clothing and performed stereotypically Asian-ness accents as comedy in the show, and the judges including RuPaul admired her performance and gave her the MVP in each episode, other Asian drag queen misunderstood that these things were acceptable and beneficial, then they just followed her. It’s important that Asian constants show their Asian identity in the show. However, it’s not a good thing that, since they are Asian, they can do whatever they want to perform as Asian identity.

At first, Manila’s cheongsam. Cheongsam is Chinese traditional clothing. She was beautiful and well-performing in that episode. But, how do Chinese and Chinese Americans feel about it? Cheongsam is a part of Chinese culture, heritage. The contestants shouldn’t easily utilize their culture for themselves to win the competition. Even though Manila is a drag queen of Asian descent, she’s not Chinese. She can’t simply use Chinese culture to perform in the TV show and to express herself. She would be better off showing her respect more for another culture.

Also, about Gia Gunn’s imitation of Jenny Bui. Gia Gunn is Japanese American. She knew that Jenny Bui was Asian. That’s why Gia Gunn picked her for the performance, she thought of being able to make fun of it. Both of them are Asian, but Jenny Bui is not Japanese. Therefore, “Konnichiwa” doesn’t make sense at all. Asian is not the same. Even if she was trying to include her own character with it, since she didn’t know about Jenny Bui much, it would have been better to have known about Jenny Bui more and to respect her.

Secondly, about Asian-ness accents that all of those three Asian queens did. It could be seen as fun, like as a joke. However, using an Asian accent to make people laugh in the show, which is a part of the stereotype of Asians, is actually problematic and traumatic for people who actually speak in a similar way. Also, there’s a possibility for non-Asians to misunderstand that they can also use an Asian-ness accent as a joke because the TV show, such RuPaul’s Drag Race, accepts the contestants to use it. As one of pop culture, which has a huge impact, the TV show including others should be really careful about the influence of pop culture.

Another problem is that Gia Gunn didn’t know about Jenny Bui that much, but she imitated Jenny Bui. There’s no respect. It’s just that she made Jenny Bui ashamed and hurt in the big TV show. The audiences might misunderstand about her and imitate her in the same way Gia Gunn did. If she wanted to perform as Jenny Bui, she should have known and been respectful for Jenny Bui to avoid problems.

Also, about Plastique Tiara. Since she continued to use an Asian-like accent again and again, it seemed that all she can do is just like to speak in an Asian-like accent, which is not herself. At first, using the Asian-ness accent is not a good way to express Asian-ness, and she seemed to miss herself, her identity, by using it many times to win.

Finally, about the judges. The judges admired Manila’s stereotypical Asian-like accent and also her cheongsam and gave her the MVP. Also, they admired Plastique’s stereotypical Asian accent at first challenge. They shouldn’t have admired these things. Their admiration could mean the acceptance of these things, which are problematic and traumatic. And it could let the audience misunderstand and do the same thing, which could be racism, in general. As the judges on the TV show, which has a huge influence on the audience, they also should be careful in term of culture and ethnicity.

Conclusion

It’s a big success of LGBTQ culture that RuPaul’s Drag Race has become popular outside of the LGBTQ community, too, and seen as important pop culture in the United States. Through this show, people can see what the LGBTQ community and drag community are like. In terms of the Asian community, even though there are still fewer Asian American drag queens in the show, some of the Asian American drag queens are performing well and have achieved success. Also, some of Asian American drag queens like Kim Chi did great jobs by representing her Asian culture as her own identity. Kim Chi showed the audience that Asian identity is attractive.

However, there are still problems in that TV program, as I mentioned. Even when Asian American drag queens are trying to represent their culture as their identities, there are misrepresentations. As Asian drag queens on the show, they should represent themselves respectfully and carefully. Also, the judges should be careful too. The TV show RuPaul’s Drag Race, the contestants, and the judges, all of them make sure that they have huge impacts on TV audiences.

Works Cited

Bui, Jenny. Instagram, 2018, www.instagram.com/nailson7th/p/Br-nIojB09D/.

Dam-Young, Hong. “Drag Queen Kim Chi Hopes to Spread Korean Culture to World.” AsiaOne, 2017, www.asiaone.com/entertainment/drag-queen-kim-chi-hopes-spread-korean-culture-world.

Fitzgerald, Christine. “Manila Luzon – The Socialite Life Interview.” Socialite Life, 14 Dec. 2018, socialitelife.com/manila-luzon-socialite-life-interview/.

Kornhaber, Spencer. “Fiercely ‘Femme, Fat, and Asian’.” The Atlantic, Atlantic Media Company, 19 May 2016, www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/05/kim-chi-rupauls-drag-race-femme-fat-asian-c-winter-han-interview-middlebury/483527/.

Nguyen, Mimi Thi, and Thuy Linh N. Tu. Alien Encounters: Popular Culture in Asian America. Duke University Press, 2007.

“List of Awards and Nominations Received by RuPaul’s Drag Race.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 22 May 2019, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_RuPaul%27s_Drag_Race.

“RuPaul.” RuPaul’s Drag Race Wiki, rupaulsdragrace.fandom.com/wiki/RuPaul.

Storey, John. Cultural Theory and Popular Culture. Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006.

Final Project Update: Week 8

Asian American drag queens in “RuPaul’s Drag Race”

1.Background

The TV-show RuPaul’s Drag Race has become a pop culture in the United States. In 2018, it received 12 major nominations and winning 6 awards in Emmy Awards. However, up to the present time, totally 13 Asian American drag queens are in that TV-show, out of about 140 queens.

In this show, Kim Chi, whose ethnicity is Korean, is one of the famous Asian drag queens and is runner-up in season 8. She is the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television. She takes her cultural cues that are currently popular in Korea and represent it into the gay community. It was one of her strengths in this competition. Like this, I’d like to explore how Asian Americans drag queens represented their Asian culture into the performance in a good way, sometimes in a bad way too, as their identity.

2. Definition

What is Pop Culture

As I mentioned in the introduction, RuPaul’s Drag race has been seen as one of pop culture in the United States. However, how do we categorize that tv-show as pop culture? What is pop culture?

According to John Storey, there are 6 definitions of pop culture in their different, general ways.
The first definition is that “popular culture is simply culture which is widely favored or well-liked by many people.” (p.4) The second definition is that “popular culture is a residual category, there to accommodate texts and practices which fail to meet the required standards to qualify as high culture.” (p.5) The third definition is that “popular culture is a hopelessly commercial culture. It is mass produced for mass consumption. Its audience is a mass of non-discriminating consumers.” (p.6) It is mass culture. The fourth definition is that  “popular culture is the culture which originates from ‘the people’.” (p.7) The fifth definition is that “popular culture as a site of struggle between the ‘resistance’ of subordinate groups and the forces of ‘incorporation’ operating in the interests of dominant groups” (p.8) The sixth definition is that in postmodernism, popular culture is “a culture which no longer recognizes the distinction between high and popular culture” (p.9)

Also, according to Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu, “It is through culture, and particularly popular culture, that persons are taught how to be kinds of citizens— how to dress, listen, shop, love, desire, and behave.” It could be also a definition of popular culture because the culture that has effects on us, our lives is popular culture.

 

So, how do we categorize RuPaul’s drag race as a pop culture?

RuPaul’s Drag race received 12 major nominations and winning 6 awards in Emmy Awards. RuPaul’s drag race could be said to be widely favored or well-liked by many people, like the first definition.

Also, RuPaul’s drag race could be placed in the fourth definition and fifth definition. Originally, drag show and drag queen are from the LGBTQ community, queer culture. RuPaul’s drag race is rooted in queer culture. However, now it’s widely known not only by the LGBTQ community but also by outside of the LGBTQ community, whichever they favor it or not. And now, it can be one of the educational tools of queer studies and gender studies. It represents the diversity of gender and sexuality, which is related to the last definition by Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu.

 

3. Asian drag queen

In this chapter, mainly I’d like to analysis Asian American drag queens’ performance in RuPaul’s drag race.

Kim Chi
Kim Chi is a Korean American drag queen from RuPaul’s drag race season 8. Her real name is Sang-Young Shin (신상영). She (/He) was born in the United States, moved to South Korea and lived there as a child and now lives in Chicago. She became the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television.

This clip shows overall her performances on RuPaul’s Drag Race season 8. She was one of the top three finalists on season 8. Even though she was not good at dancing, her talented and fantastical outfits had amazed the judges many times.

“Featuring in the show as its first Korean contestant was a great honor. I’ve always been proud of being a Korean and Korean culture, which I think is extremely beautiful. That’s the reason why I named my stage persona as Kim Chi — to promote Korea,” Kim Chi told the Korean Herald during a recent interview in Seoul. As she said, she uses a lot of K-pop themes in her performance and also actually represented Korean culture in the show on season 8.

(https://www.wmagazine.com/story/kim-chi-rupauls-drag-race-marcjacobs)

This is one of her clothes from season 8. She expressed her mother’s looks with Korean traditional clothes for women, Hanbok.

 

This is the final of season 8. She performed her song “Fat, Fem & Asian” with a contemporary version of a Hanbok, which was pretty gorgeous.  Also, a part of the lyrics is in Korean.

Analysis
“If you can’t love yourself, how in the hell you gonna love somebody else?” It’s one of the most famous RuPaul’s lines. As her line, the TV-show RuPaul’s drag race has long been concerned with self-love and non-conformity. RuPaul always expects the participants to represent themselves through their performances. I thought that her performance achieved Ru’s expectation and reproduced her identity and culture as being Asian in a good way.
Also, in her original lipsync song, she used the terms of being fat, feminine, and Asian, which are seen as deficient in the gay community. It could show us that she took her weak points as herself and overcame these. But also, it shows being fat, feminine, and Asian are not unattractive but actually attractive. Through her performance, I thought that she proved it.

 

 

Even the purpose of this shoe is to express themselves and themselves as more feminized, C. Winter Han, an associate professor of sociology at Middlebury College, said in the interview that “the Asian characters were heavily racialized in ways that the other contestants weren’t, and more importantly, the show rewarded the Asian contestants the more they Orientalized themselves.”

 

Manila Luzon
Manila Luzon is a Filipino American drag queen from season 3, All-Stars 1 and 3. Her real name is Karl Philip Michael Westerberg. She was a runner up of season 3. She was born in Minnesota and lives in Los Angeles. Her mother was born in the Philippines. Her drag name “Manila Luzon” is named from the capital city “Manila” and the largest island “Luzon” in the Philippines. She chose Manila Luzon because She wanted to celebrate my Filipino heritage.

 

Since she came back to All-Stars twice and won the main challenges in the show many times, she is a very talented drag queen. Actually, she made the judges laugh with her sense of humor and her clothes were so beautiful.

However, in season 3, she did a problematic performance. In episode 5, the main challenge was to be newscasters. Manila Luzon performed with a stereotypically pan-Asian accent. Also, in another episode, she wore a cheongsam, which was not directly related to her Asian heritage, for the challenge. These performances amazed the judges and she won those challenges.

After this season, other Asian American drag queens also did similar things.

One example is Gia Gunn who is Japanese American and was in season 6 and All-Stars 4. She used Asian accent as same as Manila Luzon did. In snatch game, in which contestants showcase their best celebrity impersonations in a game show setting, of All-Stars 4, Gia Gunn turned in an off-color performance as Jenny Bui, who is Cardi B’s Insta-famous nail technician. In the beginning, Gia Gunn said “Harro Ru! Konichiwa!” and kept speaking in very stereotypical Asia-ness accent. After the episode, Jenny Bui posted on Instagram, “Unfortunately that’s not my accent, and the only thing off the boat is the ‘fresh’ tilapia that you are allegedly serving.” Plus, in the show, Gia Gunn said that “I don’t know that much about Jenny.”

Another example is Plastique Tiara who is Vietnamese American and was on season 11, which is the latest season. This clip is the challenge of the parody film in episode 2. In this challenge, she used stereotypical Asian-ness accent as a part of her Asian identity and she was admired by the judges. However, even after this challenge, she continued to use stereotypical Asian-ness accent again and again since the judges liked her performance of Asian accent in the first challenge, which was funny.

Analysis

Since Manila Luzon represented Asian culture such as Chinese traditional cloth and performed stereotypically Asian-ness accents as a comedy in the show, and the judges including RuPaul admired her performance and gave her the MVP in each episode, other Asian drag queen misunderstood that these things were the acceptable and beneficial performance, then they just followed her. It’s important that Asian constants show their Asian identity in the show. However, it’s not a thing like since they are Asian, they can do whatever they want to perform as Asian identity.

At first, Manila’s cheongsam. Cheongsam is a Chinese traditional cloth. She was beautiful and well-performing in that episode. But, what do Chinese and Chinese Americans feel about it? Cheongsam is a part of Chinese culture, heritage. The contestants shouldn’t easily utilize their culture for themselves. Even Manila is a drag queen of Asian descent, she’s not Chinese. She can’t easily use Chinese culture to perform in the TV show and to express herself. She would better show her respect for another culture.

Also, about Gia Gunn’s imitation of Jenny Bui. Gia Gunn is Japanese American. She knew that Jenny Bui was Asian. That’s why Gia Gunn picked her up for the performance, she thought of being able to make fun of it. Both of them are Asian, but Jenny Bui is not Japanese. Therefore, “Konnichiwa” doesn’t make sense. Asian is not the same. Even if she was trying to include her own character with it, she would better have known about Jenny Bui more and respected. Asian is not the same.

Secondly, about Asian-ness accent that all of three Asian queens did. It could be seen as fun. However, using an Asian accent to make people laugh in the show, which is a part of the stereotype of Asian, is actually problematic and traumatic for people who actually speak in a similar way. Also, there’s a possibility for non-Asian to misunderstand that they can also use an Asian-ness accent as a joke because the TV-show, such RuPaul’s drag race, accepts the contestants to use it. As one of pop culture, which has a huge impact, the TV-show including others should be really careful.

Another problem is that Gia Gunn didn’t know about Jenny Bui that much, but she imitated Jenny Bui. There’s no respect. It’s just that she made Jenny Bui ashamed and hurt in the big TV-show. If she wanted to perform as Jenny Bui, she should have known and been respectful.

Also, about Plastique Tiara. Since she continued to use Asian-ness accent again and again, it seemed that all she can do is just like to speak in Asian-ness accent, which is not herself. At first, using the Asian-ness accent is not a good way to express Asian-ness, and she missed herself by using it many times to win.

Finally, about the judges. The judges admired Manila’s stereotypical Asian-ness accent and also her cheongsam and gave her the MVP. Also, they admired Plastique’s stereotypical Asian accent at first challenge. They shouldn’t have admired these things. Their admiration could mean the acceptance of these things, which are problematic and traumatic. And it could let the audience misunderstand and do the same thing, which could be racism, in general. As the judges on the TV show, which has a huge influence on the audience, they also should be careful in term of culture and ethnicity.

4. Conclusion

It’s a big success of LGBTQ culture that RuPaul’s drag race has become popular with the outside of the LGBTQ community, too, and seen as one of Pop culture in the United States. Through this show, people can see how the LGBTQ community and drag community are like. In term of the Asian community, even there are still less Asian American drag queens in the show, some of the Asian American drag queens are performing well and has achieved. Also, some of Asian American drag queens like Kim Chi did great jobs by representing her Asian culture as her own identity. Kim Chi showed the audience that Asian identity is attractive.

However, there are still problems in that TV-program as I mentioned. Even Asian American drag queens are trying to represent their culture as their identities, there are misrepresentations. As Asian drag queens on the show, they should represent themselves carefully. Also, the judges should be careful too. The TV-show ‘RuPaul’s drag race,’ the contestants and the judges, all of them make sure that they have huge impacts on a bunch of people in front of the TV.

 

Works cited

Daems, Jim. The Makeup of RuPaul’s Drag Race: Essays on the Queen of Reality Shows. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2014.

Han, C. Winter. Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gaysian America. New York University Press, 2015.

Kornhaber, Spencer. “Fiercely ‘Femme, Fat, and Asian’.” The Atlantic, Atlantic Media Company, 19 May 2016, www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/05/kim-chi-rupauls-drag-race-femme-fat-asian-c-winter-han-interview-middlebury/483527/.

Nguyen, Mimi Thi, and Thuy Linh N. Tu. Alien Encounters: Popular Culture in Asian America. Duke University Press, 2007.

“List of Awards and Nominations Received by RuPaul’s Drag Race.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 22 May 2019, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_RuPaul%27s_Drag_Race.

“RuPaul.” RuPaul’s Drag Race Wiki, rupaulsdragrace.fandom.com/wiki/RuPaul.

Storey, John. Cultural Theory and Popular Culture. Pearson Prentice Hall, 2006.

Final Project Update: New Outline

  1. Background
    1. RuPaul’s Drag Race introduction
      1. Popularity: Emmy Awards
    2. Notable Asian participant: Kim Chi
      1. Representation of Asian Culture in the show
      2. Struggle as Gay and as Asian
  2. Definition
    1. Pop Culture
      1. 6 definitions [Cultural Theory and Popular Culture]
      2. 1 definition [Alien Encounters]
    2. RuPaul’s drag race is Pop Culture
      1. Connects with some of the definitions
      2. Role as Pop culture
  3. Notable Asian American drag queen
    1. Kim Chi (an example of a good way of representation)
      1. Brief introduction
      2. Representation of Asian Culture, identity
        1. Clothes: Hanbok
          1. Explanation
        2. Performance: “Fat, Fem, and Asian”
          1. Explanation
      3. Analysis
    2. Manila Luzon (an example of a bad way of representation)
      1. Introduction
      2. Misrepresentation of Asian Culture, identity
        1. Asian accent
        2. Cheongsam
        3. The Judges’ critique
    3. Other Asian American drag queen influenced by Manila Luzon
      1. Gia Gunn
        1. Brief introduction
        2. Misrepresentation
          1. Asian Accent
            1. She didn’t know that much about Jenny Bui
      2. Plastique Tiara
        1. Brief introduction
        2. Misrepresentation
          1. Asian Accent
            1. She lost herself
    4. Analysis of three queens and the judges
      1. Not own Asian Culture
        1. Manila-Cheongsam
        2. Gia Gunn-Jenny Bui(Not Japanese)
      2. Pan-Asian Accent
        1. All three- even as a comedy; still hurts someone, traumatic, problematic
        2. Gia Gun-No respect for Jenny Bui
        3. Plastique Tiara- Lost her own identity
      3. The judges
        1. the judges shouldn’t have admired
        2. the audience might misunderstand
  4. Gay Asian American’s struggle
    1. Notable Gay Asian Americans’ (from the show)
      1. Kim Chi
        1. Parent lives in America
      2. Plastique Tiara
        1. Parents live in outside of America
      3. Analysis
    2. In general
      1. Generational gap
        1. The gap of the knowledge of sexual orientation
        2. The gap of the knowledge of gender presentation
      2. The stereotype: Racism, Homophobia, and  Racism and Homophobia
        1. of Asian
        2. of Gay
        3. of Gay Asian
  5. Conclusion

Final Project Update: Week 7

1.Background

The TV-show RuPaul’s Drag Race has become a pop culture in the United States. In 2018, it received 12 major nominations and winning 6 awards in Emmy Awards. However, up to the present time, totally 13 Asian American drag queens are in that TV-show, out of about 140 queens. I wondered why less number of Asian American queens were in this show. I’d like to analysis it.

In this show, Kim Chi, whose ethnicity is Korean, is one of the famous Asian drag queens and is runner-up in season 8. She is the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television. She takes her cultural cues that are currently popular in Korea and represent it into the gay community. It was one of her strengths in this competition. Like this, I’d like to explore how Asian Americans drag queens represented their Asian culture into the performance in a good way, sometimes in a bad way too, as their identity.


(I’m thinking if I write this part)

Also, as one of the children of Asian-immigrants, she has been struggling with the relationship of her parent. She came out to her mother that she was gay. But, her mother doesn’t know that she’s a drag queen. Also, Plastique Tiara from season 11, whose ethnicity is Vietnamese, hasn’t explained to her parents what she’s actually doing as a performer. It might be related to the cultural and generational difference of understanding LGBTQ culture. Then, I’d like to explore the struggles of both being Asian and being gay, especially with focusing on family background and the stereotype of Asian, Gay, and Gay Asian.


2. Definition

What is Pop Culture

As I mentioned in the introduction, RuPaul’s Drag race has been seen as one of pop culture in the United States. However, how do we categorize that tv-show as pop culture? What is pop culture?

According to John Storey, there are 6 definitions of pop culture in their different, general ways.
The first definition is that “popular culture is simply culture which is widely favored or well-liked by many people.” (p.4) The second definition is that “popular culture is a residual category, there to accommodate texts and practices which fail to meet the required standards to qualify as high culture.” (p.5) The third definition is that “popular culture is a hopelessly commercial culture. It is mass produced for mass consumption. Its audience is a mass of non-discriminating consumers.” (p.6) It is mass culture. The fourth definition is that  “popular culture is the culture which originates from ‘the people’.” (p.7) The fifth definition is that “popular culture as a site of struggle between the ‘resistance’ of subordinate groups and the forces of ‘incorporation’ operating in the interests of dominant groups” (p.8) The sixth definition is that in postmodernism, popular culture is “a culture which no longer recognizes the distinction between high and popular culture” (p.9)

Also, according to Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu, “It is through culture, and particularly popular culture, that persons are taught how to be kinds of citizens— how to dress, listen, shop, love, desire, and behave.” It could be also a definition of popular culture because the culture that has effects on us, our lives is popular culture.

 

So, how do we categorize RuPaul’s drag race as a pop culture?

RuPaul’s Drag race received 12 major nominations and winning 6 awards in Emmy Awards. RuPaul’s drag race could be said to be widely favored or well-liked by many people, like the first definition.

Also, RuPaul’s drag race could be placed in the fourth definition and fifth definition. Originally, drag show and drag queen are from the LGBTQ community, queer culture. RuPaul’s drag race is rooted in queer culture. However, now it’s widely known not only by the LGBTQ community but also by outside of the LGBTQ community, whichever they favor it or not. And now, it can be one of the educational tools of queer studies and gender studies. It represents the diversity of gender and sexuality, which is related to the last definition by Mimi Thi Nguyen and Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu.

 

3. Asian drag queen

In this chapter, mainly I’d like to analysis Asian American drag queens’ performance in RuPaul’s drag race.

Kim Chi
Kim Chi is a Korean American drag queen from RuPaul’s drag race season 8. Her real name is Sang-Young Shin (신상영). She (/He) was born in the United States, moved to South Korea and lived there as a child and now lives in Chicago. She became the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television.

This clip shows overall her performances on RuPaul’s Drag Race season 8. She was one of the top three finalists on season 8. Even though she was not good at dancing, her talented and fantastical outfits had amazed the judges many times.

“Featuring in the show as its first Korean contestant was a great honor. I’ve always been proud of being a Korean and Korean culture, which I think is extremely beautiful. That’s the reason why I named my stage persona as Kim Chi — to promote Korea,” Kim Chi told the Korean Herald during a recent interview in Seoul. As she said, she uses a lot of K-pop themes in her performance and also actually represented Korean culture in the show on season 8.

(https://www.wmagazine.com/story/kim-chi-rupauls-drag-race-marcjacobs)

This is one of her clothes from season 8. She expressed her mother’s looks with Korean traditional clothes for women, Hanbok.

 

This is the final of season 8. She performed her song “Fat, Fem & Asian” with a contemporary version of a Hanbok, which was pretty gorgeous.  Also, a part of the lyrics is in Korean.

Analysis
“If you can’t love yourself, how in the hell you gonna love somebody else?” It’s one of the most famous RuPaul’s lines. As her line, the TV-show RuPaul’s drag race has long been concerned with self-love and non-conformity. RuPaul always expects the participants to represent themselves through their performances. I thought that her performance achieved Ru’s expectation and reproduced her identity and culture as being Asian in a good way.
Also, in her original lipsync song, she used the terms of being fat, feminine, and Asian, which are seen as deficient in the gay community. It could show us that she took her weak points as herself and overcame these. But also, it shows being fat, feminine, and Asian are not unattractive but actually attractive. Through her performance, I thought that she proved it.

 

 

Even the purpose of this shoe is to express themselves and themselves as more feminized, C. Winter Han, an associate professor of sociology at Middlebury College, said in the interview that “the Asian characters were heavily racialized in ways that the other contestants weren’t, and more importantly, the show rewarded the Asian contestants the more they Orientalized themselves.”

 

Manila Luzon
Manila Luzon is a Filipino American drag queen from season 3, All-Stars 1 and 3. Her real name is Karl Philip Michael Westerberg. She was a runner up of season 3. She was born in Minnesota and lives in Los Angeles. Her mother was born in the Philippines. Her drag name “Manila Luzon” is named from the capital city “Manila” and the largest island “Luzon” in the Philippines. She chose Manila Luzon because She wanted to celebrate my Filipino heritage.

 

Since she came back to All-Stars twice and won the main challenges in the show many times, she is a very talented drag queen. Actually, she made the judges laugh with her sense of humor and her clothes were so beautiful.

However, in season 3, she did a problematic performance. In episode 5, the main challenge was to be newscasters. Manila Luzon performed with a stereotypically pan-Asian accent. Also, in another episode, she wore a cheongsam, which was not directly related to her Asian heritage, for the challenge. These performances amazed the judges and she won those challenges.

After this season, other Asian American drag queens also did similar things.

One example is Gia Gunn who is Japanese American and was in season 6 and All-Stars 4. She used Asian accent as same as Manila Luzon did. In snatch game, in which contestants showcase their best celebrity impersonations in a game show setting, of All-Stars 4, Gia Gunn turned in an off-color performance as Jenny Bui, who is Cardi B’s Insta-famous nail technician. In the beginning, Gia Gunn said “Harro Ru! Konichiwa!” and kept speaking in very stereotypical Asia-ness accent. After the episode, Jenny Bui posted on Instagram, “Unfortunately that’s not my accent, and the only thing off the boat is the ‘fresh’ tilapia that you are allegedly serving.” Plus, in the show, Gia Gunn said that “I don’t know that much about Jenny.”

Another example is Plastique Tiara who is Vietnamese American and was on season 11, which is the latest season. This clip is the challenge of the parody film in episode 2. In this challenge, she used stereotypical Asian-ness accent as a part of her Asian identity and she was admired by the judges. However, even after this challenge, she continued to use stereotypical Asian-ness accent again and again since the judges liked her performance of Asian accent in the first challenge, which was funny.

Analysis

Since Manila Luzon represented Asian culture such as Chinese traditional cloth and performed stereotypically Asian-ness accents as a comedy in the show, and the judges including RuPaul admired her performance and gave her the MVP in each episode, other Asian drag queen misunderstood that these things were the acceptable and beneficial performance, then they just followed her. It’s important that Asian constants show their Asian identity in the show. However, it’s not a thing like since they are Asian, they can do whatever they want to perform as Asian identity.

At first, Manila’s cheongsam. Cheongsam is a Chinese traditional cloth. She was beautiful and well-performing in that episode. But, what do Chinese and Chinese Americans feel about it? Cheongsam is a part of Chinese culture, heritage. The contestants shouldn’t easily utilize their culture for themselves. Even Manila is a drag queen of Asian descent, she’s not Chinese. She can’t easily use Chinese culture to perform in the TV show and to express herself. She would better show her respect for another culture.

Also, about Gia Gunn’s imitation of Jenny Bui. Gia Gunn is Japanese American. She knew that Jenny Bui was Asian. That’s why Gia Gunn picked her up for the performance, she thought of being able to make fun of it. Both of them are Asian, but Jenny Bui is not Japanese. Therefore, “Konnichiwa” doesn’t make sense. Asian is not the same. Even if she was trying to include her own character with it, she would better have known about Jenny Bui more and respected. Asian is not the same.

Secondly, about Asian-ness accent that all of three Asian queens did. It could be seen as fun. However, using an Asian accent to make people laugh in the show, which is a part of the stereotype of Asian, is actually problematic and traumatic for people who actually speak in a similar way. Also, there’s a possibility for non-Asian to misunderstand that they can also use an Asian-ness accent as a joke because the TV-show, such RuPaul’s drag race, accepts the contestants to use it. As one of pop culture, which has a huge impact, the TV-show including others should be really careful.

Another problem is that Gia Gunn didn’t know about Jenny Bui that much, but she imitated Jenny Bui. There’s no respect. It’s just that she made Jenny Bui ashamed and hurt in the big TV-show. If she wanted to perform as Jenny Bui, she should have known and been respectful.

Also, about Plastique Tiara. Since she continued to use Asian-ness accent again and again, it seemed that all she can do is just like to speak in Asian-ness accent, which is not herself. At first, using the Asian-ness accent is not a good way to express Asian-ness, and she missed herself by using it many times to win.

Finally, about the judges. The judges admired Manila’s stereotypical Asian-ness accent and also her cheongsam and gave her the MVP. Also, they admired Plastique’s stereotypical Asian accent at first challenge. They shouldn’t have admired these things. Their admiration could mean the acceptance of these things, which are problematic and traumatic. And it could let the audience misunderstand and do the same thing, which could be racism, in general. As the judges on the TV show, which has a huge influence on the audience, they also should be careful in term of culture and ethnicity.

4. Conclusion

It’s a big success of LGBTQ culture that RuPaul’s drag race has become popular with the outside of the LGBTQ community, too, and seen as one of Pop culture in the United States. Through this show, people can see how the LGBTQ community and drag community are like. In term of the Asian community, even there are still less Asian American drag queens in the show, some of the Asian American drag queens are performing well and has achieved. Also, some of Asian American drag queens like Kim Chi did great jobs by representing her Asian culture as her own identity. Kim Chi showed the audience that Asian identity is attractive.

However, there are still problems in that TV-program as I mentioned. Even Asian American drag queens are trying to represent their culture as their identities, there are misrepresentations. As Asian drag queens on the show, they should represent themselves carefully. Also, the judges should be careful too. The TV-show ‘RuPaul’s drag race,’ the contestants and the judges, all of them make sure that they have huge impacts on a bunch of people in front of the TV.

Final Project Update: Week 6 Partial draft [in progress]

1.Introduction

Background

The TV-show RuPaul’s Drag Race has become a pop culture in the United States. In 2018, it received12 major nominations and winning 6 awards in Emmy Awards.

Up to the present time, totally 13 Asian American drag queens are in that TV-show, out of about 140 queens.

Kim Chi, whose ethnicity is Korean, is one of the famous Asian drag queens and is runner-up in season 8. She is the first Korean drag queen to be featured on American national television. She takes her cultural cues that are currently popular in Korea and represent it into the gay community. It was one of her strengths in this competition. Like this, I’d like to explore how Asian Americans drag queens represented their Asian culture into the performance in a good way, sometimes in a bad way too, as their identity.

Also, as one of the children of Asian-immigrants, she has been struggling with the relationship of her parent. She came out to her mother that she was gay. But, her mother doesn’t know that she’s a drag queen. Also, Plastique Tiara from season 11, whose ethnicity is Vietnamese, hasn’t explained to her parents what she’s actually doing as a performer. It might be related to the cultural and generational difference of understanding LGBTQ culture. Then, I’d like to explore the struggles of both being Asian and being gay.

[Finally, I’m planning to explore the impact of pop culture on the LGBTQ community and Non-LGBTQ community]

 

What is Pop Culture

-It’s connected to how “RuPaul’s Drag race” is identified as Pop Culture
(John Storey. “Cultural Theory and Popular Culture.” The University of Georgia Press. 2006)
(Mimi Thi Nguyen.”Alien Encounters: Popular Culture in Asian America.” Duke University Press. 2007)

Who is Asian American

-It’s related to Asian American drag queen. Who is Asian American drag queen?

2. Asian Culture in Pop culture “Representation of Asian Culture in RuPaul’s Drag race”

The history of Drag show and drag queen
-Connects to RuPaul’s drag race

The introduction of “RuPaul’s drag race”
-History and Origin
-As pop culture
-Who’s Audience

Asian American drag queens in RuPaul’s Drag Race
-13 Asian American queens
Gia Gunn (Season 6, All stars 4) Japanese
Jiggly Caliente (Season 4) Filipino
Jujubee (Season 2, All stars 1) Laotian
Kim Chi (Season 8) Korean
Kimora Black (Season 9) Vietnamese
Manila Luzon (Season 3, All stars 1, 4) Filipino
Ongina (Season 1) Filipino
Phi Phi O’Hara (Season 4, All stars 2) Portuguese-Filipino
Plastique Tiara (Season 11) Vietnamese
Raja (Season 3) Dutch-Indonesian
Soju (Season 11) Korean
Vivienne Pinay (Season 5) Filippino
Yuhua Hamasaki (Season 10) Han Chinese

The way to represent their Asian Culture in the show
-representation
-misrepresentation
-Stereotype of Asian
-Asian clothes
-Comedy

 

3. Gay Asian American
The stereotype of Asian and gay Asian

 

The struggles as Gay Asian American (drag queen)
-Racism in the LGBTQ community
-Homophobia in the Asian community
-Generational gap

 

4. Conclusion

Final Project Updates: Week 5 (In progress)

Week 5: A detailed outline of your essay, including items you might imbed in your essay

  1. Introduction
    1. The definition of Pop Culture
    2. The definition of Asian American
    3. The definition of Queer culture
  2. Queer culture and Asian culture in Pop Culture
    1. The history of a drag show and drag queen
    2. Brief introduction of “RuPaul’s drag race” as Pop culture
    3. Asian and Asian American in “RuPaul’s drag race”
    4. How Asian American drag queens represent their Asian culture in the drag show
  3. Gay Aian American drag queens
    1. The stereotype of Gay Asian American
    2. Race and Racism in the LGBTQ community
    3. The struggles as Gay Asian American queens
  4. Conclusion

Final Project Updates: Week 4

Week 4: A list of preliminary sources, each accompanied by a short statement explaining why it’s potentially useful to your project.


Books: 

1. The makeup of RuPaul’s drag race: essays on the queen of reality shows

This book explains TV-show “RuPaul’s drag race”‘s ambivalent appropriation of pop culture. I can learn how one of these queer culture is replaced as pop culture, especially in TV program.

2. Asian Americans in the Twenty-first Century

One of interviewees in this book, “Being Asian, Being Gay”, talks about  struggles as gay identity and also as Asian American identity in term of generational gap.

3. Q & A: Queer in Asian America

This book is about queer Asian American and includes interviews of Asian American who identify as Queer. From various aspects by many interviewees, I can know their struggles and the issues of queer Asian Americans.

4. Geisha of a Different Kind

This book “shows to the internationally sought-after Thai kathoey, or “ladyboy,” to construct a theory of queerness that is inclusive of the race and gender particularities of the gay Asian male experience in the United States” (https://nyupress.org/author/c-winter-han/). This book is really connected to my topic. I can see how Asian American queer community (intersectional issue of race and gender) is like in the United States. And also, the author is talking about Thailand’s kathoey.  I can learn the different situation of drag show in Asian country.

Jornal Article:

5. When the Girls Are Men: Negotiating Gender and Sexual Dynamics in a Study of Drag Queen

This article explores a troupe of self-identified gay men who perform as drag queens. I can learn the introduction of drag queens, their role in the community, and their public performances.

6. The trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Culture

This article explains an ethnographic case study of gay and lesbian performance cultures. The author argues “to move beyond the theoretical quagmire born of “queer” ’s function as both verb and generic, we must adopt a new intellectual paradigm that views relations as the conditions of possibility for embodiment and discourse alike”(p.304). It can be connected to how new culture is accepted or recognized.

7. Out Here and Over There: Queerness and Diaspora in Asian American Studies

This article talks about intersectional issues of Asian American and LGBTQ identity. I might be able to see the struggles of LGBTQ and Asian American, comparing to non-Asian Americans LGBTQ.

Others:

8. Lavern Cummings & David DeAlba

This youtube video shows the revolution of drag queen and how Drag queen has changed from the 1920s till now. I can know how the drag queen has changed visually and the symbolic meaning of drag queen through the history.

9. “RuPaul’s drag race” series (Wiki / IMDb)

This TV show is recognized as one of American Pop Culture. I’d like to use this TV-show  to describe how drag queen and drag race are like. Through this TV-show, I can see how Asian American drag queens utilize their Asian culture, in term of costumes and performances.

10. RuPaul’s drag race wiki

This website is useful for searching drag queen’s information. I’d like to use this page for researching Asian American drag queen’s profiles, such as their ethnicity, early life, career, personal life.

11. Best of Gia Gunn: A Fishy Girl | RuPaul7s Drag Race All Stars 4

Gia Gunn (Gia Ketaro Ichikawa) is Japanese American Drag Queen who was in “RuPaul’s drag race” season 6 and All Star 4. Also, she is known as trans woman. As you can see in this video, she integrates Japanese culture in her performance. Through these video, I’d like to see how Asian American drag queens integrate their Asian culture in a good way.

12. How “RuPaul’s Drag Race” has influenced pop culture

This article explains how this TV show connects with Pop Culture. I’d like to see how this TV show has evolved and has been known by many people in the United States.

13. How ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ came to dominate pop culture

This is also about similar topic with No.9. The content is similar but, I might see some different views of the history of this TV-show and relationship between Pop culture and RuPaul’s drag show.

14. 34 Drag Performers Around the World Sound Off on the Influence of ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ & More

This article has 34 drag queens’ and kings’ interviews about the connection between drag race and local drag shows around the world which are not recognized as pop culture but queer culture. Some of them are talking about the situations of the local drag show in Asian countries.

15. The Fierceness of ‘Femme, Fat, and Asian’

This article is the interview of the author, C.Winter Han, of the book “Geisha of a Different Kind”.  He is talking about the stereotype of gay Asian Americans. Also, he talks about Asian American drag queens in Rupaul’s drag race.

Representation of Asian Culture; Stereotype of Gaysian American; Asian Immigrants (generational gap; the way of coming out)

16. ‘Sorry- Love You’: Asian Americans on ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’

Asian Americans on RuPaul’s drag race
Representation of Asian Culture

17. Kim Chi: The First Drag Queen

About Kim-chi

18. Q and A with drag sensation Kim Chi

interview of Kim Chi

19. Drag queen Kim Chi hopes to spread Korean culture to the world

Final Project Updates: Week 3

Week 3: Your final choice of a topic, why you selected that one, and a description of how you plan to explore it.

Topic: Asian American drag queen

Kim Chi is a Korean American drag queen. She is wearing Korean traditional cloth. This song title is “Fat, Fem and Asian”. I felt that she expressed to be proud of being fat, feminine and Asian on this song.

 

Drag queen basically represents men, sometime women too, who dress in women for performing. When I watched “RuPaul’s drag race” for the first time, I got into it. It was just fun to watch. At the same time, I thought that drag queen and drag show are one of the symbol of diversity in term of Gender. And these days, the TV-show “RuPaul’s drag race”, which was Queer culture, is becoming a part of POP culture. Also, there were few famous Asian American drag queens in that show who express their Asian culture by performance.

In my final project, I’d like to discuss Asian American drag queens, especially those who performed in RuPaul’s drag race, their performance and their struggles as being Asian and being gay. Also, I’d like to research some situations of drag queen and drag show in some asian countries, probably Thailand where drag show is accepted as pop culture, and Japan where Queer culture is not popular as same as here.

Final Project Updates: Week2

Week 2: A list of no more than 3 potential topics and an explanation of why each one is of interest to you.

  • Tattoo: Tattoo is one of arts with using the bodies. Some tattoos may have no meanings, however, others have meaning with which people want to express somethings such as themselves. I don’t have any tattoos on my body because it’s still kind of taboo in Japan to get tattoo. There’s big difference between American’s and Japanese views toward tattoo.
  • Drag queen and show: It’s fun to watch drag shows such as Rupaul’s drag show. Recently, that TV-show is being seen as a common culture, although It may not be accepted in some places. I think that it’s one of the symbols of diversity culture. There are some Asian American drag queens succeeding.

In-Class Writing: Album Cover Analysis

The album title is “Rumours” by Fleetwood Mac (1977). The cover is simple. Two people, man and woman, posing and holding their hands with beige-color’s background. Man is Mick Fleetwood, and woman is Stevie Nicks.

Fleetwood mac is famous for the complicating relationship among the group.

The reason the title is called “Rumours” is that  their songs’ lyrics seemed like looking into their hearts and they wanted these lyrics to be just only “Rumours”. Since all of members had issues of their relationship, each members wrote songs about their relationship. The fonts of “Fleetwood Mac” and “Rumours” seem to express their complicated relationship.

Mick Fleetwood and Stevie Nicks on the album cover look like acting something. She seems to engender an atmosphere of wizard. He looks like pretending to be an actor. And, by looking at their hands, i can see that they are strongly connected each other as members of same band, even their situation was not great.