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Daywatch: Pride under attack

Daywatch: Pride under attack

Chicago Tribune18 hours ago

Good morning, Chicago.
Christopher Colwell of Valparaiso, Indiana, teared up a bit as his grandmother sang with her church choir during Northwest Indiana Pridefest earlier this month, calling the moment a haven of acceptance in a state and nation that's become increasingly hostile to queer men like him.
The grandson and grandma briefly embraced after her performance on a stage adorned with rainbow-colored balloons and a giant Pride flag.
'I can't stand the current climate in this state. It don't represent its people anymore,' said Colwell, 25, at the June 8 event at Riverview Park in Lake Station. 'I have a really poor outlook on the country as a whole.'
While Pride events in the past were largely celebrations of the rights the LGBTQ community has secured — as well as promotions for greater representation and acceptance — many activists say the focus this year has been on girding protections and freedoms that are being actively rolled back on the federal level as well as in many Republican-led states such as Indiana.
Read the full story from the Tribune's Angie Leventis Lourgos.
Here are the top stories you need to know to start your day, including CPS eliminating more than 200 positions, violent crime dropping to levels not seen in a decade in Chicago and which restaurant Tribune food critic Louisa Kung Liu Chu says is one of the best in the city right now.
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Dozens of Bikes and Mics motorcyclists revved their engines, leaning forward on their handlebars as the crowd cheered. After a final countdown from parade organizers, they rolled down North Halsted Street, heralding Chicago's 54th annual Pride Parade forward.
This year's theme was 'United in Pride,' as the Pride Chicago organization emphasizes community solidarity in an uncertain political time for the LGBTQ+ population in America and celebrates 10 years of legalized same-sex marriage.
Across Illinois, millions of people are anxiously awaiting the next move on a bill that would cut hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicaid across the country.
The 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' would slash the program, which provides health care coverage to people with low incomes, in order to help pay for tax cuts and border and national security. President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans say the bill would cut waste, fraud and abuse from Medicaid, providing coverage only to those who truly need it.
In a cost-cutting move to plug a $734 million shortfall, Chicago Public Schools officials on Friday said they laid off dozens of workers in the district's central office and citywide staff.
In all, CPS laid off 161 employees, according to district officials.
Throughout 2019, Chicago police officers made nearly 80,000 arrests before scaling them back significantly during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic the following spring.
Now five years later, that drop appears not to be just a COVID-era blip: In recent years, arrests have rebounded slightly, but annually police still are recording tens of thousands of fewer arrests than they did in 2019.
Major cities across the country, including New York and Los Angeles, have seen significant dips in violent crime since the unrest of 2020, when protests, riots and looting followed the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in Minneapolis and the COVID-19 pandemic was taking hold.
Now Chicago finds itself firmly in that group.
A $24 million lead paint lawsuit payout. Dissatisfied residents. Staff members who have seen the vast majority of executive leaders turn over in the last 10 months. The Trump administration's priorities to slash the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's programs and staff.
These are just some of the issues the next CEO of the Chicago Housing Authority, the third largest public housing authority in the country, will face coming into the role.
Record high nighttime temperatures, a dangerously high heat index and intense humidity swept through Chicago from June 21 to 23, marking the city's first major heat wave of the summer. Ahead of the heat wave, Mayor Brandon Johnson told residents at a June 20 news conference that the city was 'prepared to demonstrate the full force of government' by offering city-run cooling centers.
The city's website promotes 288 cooling center locations across the city, which are intended to 'offer residents air-conditioned refuge' during extreme heat advisories. Of those, 110 are outdoor 'splash pads' — water features operated by the Chicago Park District that don't offer any indoor cooling space. In addition, only two-thirds of the indoor cooling centers were open at least part of the day every day during the three-day heat wave.
It was a hot start to summer in Chicago for our legacy sports teams, writes Paul Sullivan. Up was down, down was up and our downtown streets buckled just in time for the Chicago Street Race.
A unique comedy game show is coming to Chicago, and while anyone can watch, the show's contestants share one commonality: Divorce.
'The Big D' (you can guess what the 'D' stands for here) is a matchmaking show that allows divorced singles in the 40-60 age range to meet people in the real world and, hopefully, spark a connection.
While the Italian American restaurant Void does whimsy well, most evident with its Spaghetti Uh-O's and No-Lört, it's become one of the best restaurants in Chicago right now, writes Tribune food critic Louisa Kung Liu Chu.
The Route 66 road trip ended at the beginning, at East Jackson Boulevard and South Michigan Avenue in Chicago, where a brown sign hanging 12 feet high on a light post tells people they've reached the venerable road's threshold.
While the route often conjures images of quaint small towns, its foundation, said historian and author Jim Hinckley, has always been rooted in Chicago. The existing roads and trails that would eventually become Route 66 nearly 100 years ago largely followed the railroad, with Chicago as its hub.
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Rosie O'Donnell blasts Jeff Bezos, Lauren Sánchez's Italy wedding: 'It turned my stomach'
Rosie O'Donnell blasts Jeff Bezos, Lauren Sánchez's Italy wedding: 'It turned my stomach'

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

Rosie O'Donnell blasts Jeff Bezos, Lauren Sánchez's Italy wedding: 'It turned my stomach'

For most weddings, well-wishes for the newlyweds are a common courtesy. But Rosie O'Donnell is bucking tradition. The outspoken comedian and TV personality, 63, blasted the high-profile wedding of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and media entrepreneur Lauren Sánchez in a poem-style letter shared to her Substack newsletter on June 29. Bezos and Sánchez, whose lavish nuptials in Italy sparked controversy and protests, were married in a star-studded ceremony in Venice on June 27. "The BEZOS wedding, it turned my stomach. Seeing all these billionaires gathering in the gross excess of it all," O'Donnell wrote. "Is Oprah friends with Jeff Bezos? Really — how is that possible? He treats his employees with disdain. By any metric he is not a nice man." Winfrey was among the many famous faces in attendance at Bezos and Sánchez's wedding, which boasted an A-list guest list that included Kim and Khloé Kardashian, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kendall and Kylie Jenner, Bill Gates, Kris Jenner and Brooks Nader. O'Donnell also aimed at Sánchez, whom she described as Bezos' "fake fembot wife." The former talk show host's letter also included a before-and-after photo of Sánchez that appeared to criticize her use of plastic surgery. "Why would he choose her after the salt of the earth Mackenzie," O'Donnell continued, referring to Bezos' first wife, author and billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. He "sold his soul is what it looks like from here. The devil is smiling at all his conquests." O'Donnell, who moved to Ireland in January following the 2024 election victory of President Donald Trump, also referenced the Republican president's proposed "big, beautiful bill," as well as other sociopolitical issues such as LGBTQ rights in the U.S. and the humanitarian crisis of the Israel-Hamas conflict. "Bezos was raised by a single mother. He knows exactly what he does," O'Donnell wrote. "So do all of his guests — posing for photos, forgetting themselves in their designer outfits. Ready for a Vogue cover, a spot on 'ET,' more worthless performative nonsense." She added: "We have become numb to gross excess. We have learned to tolerate it: celebrity worship, devoid of humanity." In the weeks leading up to Bezos and Sánchez's luxury wedding, several protesters — comprised of local anti-tourist activists, members of Greenpeace Italy and the U.K. group "Everyone hates Elon" (Musk) — took to the streets to air their grievances, arguing that city authorities were prioritizing tourism over resident needs, per Reuters. The celebrity nuptials similarly caused an uproar on social media, with one user describing the wedding as the face of "oligarchy." "There is something wrong here. There can be no denying," O'Donnell concluded. "Something inside has died, and I can't hide. I just can't fake it." Contributing: Taijuan Moorman, Jay Stahl, Saman Shafiq and Charles Trepany, USA TODAY

11 Of The Very, Very, Very Worst Queer TV And Movie Scenes Of All Time...And 10 That Are So Perfect, They've Become Iconic
11 Of The Very, Very, Very Worst Queer TV And Movie Scenes Of All Time...And 10 That Are So Perfect, They've Become Iconic

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

11 Of The Very, Very, Very Worst Queer TV And Movie Scenes Of All Time...And 10 That Are So Perfect, They've Become Iconic

I asked BuzzFeed readers to share the LGBTQ+ TV and movie scenes they deemed the very the ones they deemed the very worst. So, without further ado, here are 11 queer scenes that totally missed the mark, and here are 10 more that were so good, they became instantly iconic: When Samantha reveals that she's dating Maria in Sex in the City: "I recently rewatched Sex and the City and couldn't help but cringe at the lack of support when Samantha told the girls. Samantha is such a girl's girl and always supports her friends, whether it's in terms of sex, sexuality, or anything else. It really disappointed me!" — Harriet, 34 "On Schitt's Creek, when David explains himself with wine labels. It helped put a lot of things into words for a lot of people." "I also believe a lot of light bulbs went off and people figured out that they are bisexual. A lot of us figured out it's okay to like the wine, not the labels. 🌈✌️ —julessomewhere Santana's bi-phobic comments after she starts seeing Dani (Demi Lovato) on Glee: —Angelica Martinez When Carmen realizes Benny is gay in Overcompensating. "For some reason, the hug from the party scene in Overcompensating episode 5 between Benny and Carmen at the Halloween party really got to me. The way the music cuts out when she realizes that Benny is gay is just so perfect. I was in college in the early 2010s as well, and I get emotional thinking about how — as an out trans woman — I could have had a similar experience. It didn't happen for me, but seeing Benny be automatically accepted by his best friend is just beautiful." — Rachel B Villanelle dying in the finale of Killing Eve. "They were finally together after four long seasons of cat and mouse, and then Villanelle dying by a gunshot?! She and Eve deserved so much more. I choose to pretend the last five minutes of Killing Eve never happened." — Mathew, 35 Clare's coming out scene in Derry Girls. "I'm the wee lesbian might be one of the funniest lines of the show." —Anonymous "I hate to say it, but any Mabel (Selena Gomez) and Alice (Cara Delevingne) scene in Only Murders in the Building. Good show, but god, there's negative chemistry between them and I felt bad watching it." —flubber7777 When Eric and his dad, Mr. Effiong, have this raw conversation in Sex Education. —Angelica Martinez "The ladies discussing how they don't believe in being bisexual in SATC. So much bi-erasure and shaming." —Anonymous When Willow comes out to Buffy in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. "I think it's such a beautiful scene, and I love how Buffy reacts. She is a little shocked at first, but supports Willow throughout." —Anonymous "The entire plot of Happiest Season." "Portraying staying with a partner who would deny being your partner and expect you to pretend to be someone else is beyond toxic. Kristen Stewart's character should not have forgiven her partner for how she was treated." — Emma, 27 When Jack comes out to his father in Dawson's Creek. —Anonymous "Definitely Finn singing the weird slow version of 'Girls Just Wanna Have Fun' to Santana on Glee when she was just starting to accept her sexuality." "Not only was the song a REALLY bad and awkward cover, but acting like he was being a heroically good friend just for singing it to her... the vibes were off." —Anonymous "In This Is Us, when Randall and Tess's daughter comes out to them. I just pictured my child sharing something so big about themselves, and me reassuring them there's nothing they could do or be that would make me love them any less." "Randall and Tess handled it so lovingly. I cried all night knowing there are parents that wouldn't react like that." — Lana "When Kurt from Glee was being biphobic after Blaine and Rachel drunkenly kissed during the 'Blame It On the Alcohol' episode, and Blaine thought he might be bisexual." "It plays into the myth that bisexual men aren't actually bisexual: they're just gay men in denial pretending to be into women so that they can feel 'normal'. And it being Kurt — a character who went through such hardships, an identity crisis, and intense bullying due to his own sexuality — made the scene even worse." — Brandyce, 29 "This scene is definitely problematic. For a show about accepting yourself, this was definitely not on theme. Perhaps Blaine doesn't turn out to be bisexual, but there are many teenage boys who might be. This sends the wrong message to them." —Anonymous "Glee had a lot of bi-phobic moments now that I think about it. This one was awful because I was in my teens while Glee was on, and at that time, I was also questioning my sexuality, and that was the first time I saw someone say, 'Hey, I like boys AND girls.' It was something I could immediately relate to, only to be shut down instantly by someone else saying it was a lie..." —Anonymous The scene where Robin comes out to Steve in Stranger Things. —Angelica Martinez "The scene in Blue is the Warmest Color where one woman fingers the other very conspicuously in a restaurant, and the other woman (the one being fingered) was screaming and moaning louder than a banshee." "I hated that scene; it made me so uncomfortable. The whole movie was made even worse when it came out that the star, Lèa Seydoux, was extremely uncomfortable filming the movie as a whole. I truly feel like that movie was made more for straight men rather than queer women. And yes, the director and main writer was a man (Abdellatif Kechiche)." —minervamcgonogall When Rosa comes out to her parents in Brooklyn Nine-Nine. "Rosa's storyline in Brooklyn Nine-Nine! Her parents initially were upset and in denial, her dad eventually came around (and her mom was not quite ready). I loved the way Rosa stood her ground with her identity, even if it meant losing her family. I also truly appreciated the squad coming together to support her and remind her that they all have her back and are her family, too." — Sam, 27 "When Troy and Cal come out as a couple in American Horror Story: Double Feature. They talk in a way that's so vulgar and weird, you'd think the writer had never spoken to a gay person in their life." —Alex, 30 "Caitlyn and Vi's sex scene in Arcane. Such a monumental scene for lesbian representation and desire, so beautifully directed and animated, and the storyboards for it won an Annie Award!" —Anonymous "When The 100 had Clarke and Lexa finally get together, and then killed Lexa (who was a badass warrior) off moments later via a stray bullet." "Their relationship had a lot of build-up, and to kill Lexa moments after they slept together for the first time was a slap in the face to both the characters and fans. It's the worst case of the 'bury your gays' trope I've seen." —Anonymous "One of the best characters on the show, and she had amazing chemistry with Clark. Terrible, lazy writing, and the definition of 'Bury Your Gays.'" —Anonymous Did we miss any? Give us your hot takes in the comments below. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity. Looking for more LGBTQ+ or Pride content? Then check out all of BuzzFeed's posts celebrating Pride 2025.

'Drag Race's Naysha Lopez claps back at Violet Chachki & Gottmik's Roscoe's shade
'Drag Race's Naysha Lopez claps back at Violet Chachki & Gottmik's Roscoe's shade

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Drag Race's Naysha Lopez claps back at Violet Chachki & Gottmik's Roscoe's shade

for The London Edition;(L-R) Violet Chachki and Gottmik at an intimate Pride dinner at The London Edition's Penthouse in support of the Pink Noise Foundation in London, England; Naysha Lopez at the grand premiere event of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars season 8 in New York City. RuPaul's Drag Race superstars Violet Chachki and Gottmik released a spicy new episode of No Gorge, their joint podcast, on Thursday, June 26. While the two drag artists explore various topics on this new episode, certain negative remarks from the episode are making the rounds within the Drag Race fandom and queendom. For instance, this new No Gorge episode features Violet bringing up different tangents related to her season 7 costars like Trixie Mattel, Katya, and Ginger Minj. Meanwhile, Gottmik gets candid about her Snatch Game-winning impersonation of Paris Hilton. There's also a surprising (and random) mention of Roscoe's Tavern — a prominent queer venue in Chicago that's been a staple of the LGBTQ+ community since 1987 — that comes up in the No Gorge episode. After catching wind of the comments made by Violet and Gottmik about Roscoe's, Naysha Lopez made space in the All Stars 10 episode 9 viewing party live-stream to defend the venue and clap back at the comments made on No Gorge. Here's our full breakdown and timeline explaining this new drama. New episodes of are released every Friday on . Quotes always make more sense when they're presented with some context, so let's unpack the polarizing quotes from Violet and Gottmik in their latest episode of No Gorge — which was titled "We Have an Announcement… and We're Losing Our Minds." It all starts with Gottmik warning fans that the Snatch Game-winning impersonation of Paris Hilton will be sunsetting in the near future. "We're filming this pod and then I'm going to the airport. I'm going to be Paris Hilton for a month," Gottmik says on No Gorge. "You guys, this is the last time. I cannot do this anymore. That was years ago." For context, Gottmik is referencing the Snatch Game Live on Tour by ITD Events, which starts this Wednesday, July 2 at the Llewellyn Hall in Australia. The tour will also feature Drag Race stars like Hannah Conda (as Liza Minnelli), Jimbo (as Shirley Temple), Jujubee (as Eartha Kitt), Pythia (as Zeus), Tia Kofi (as Anne Boleyn), and Trinity The Tuck (as Caitlyn Jenner). Drag Race Down Under judge Rhys Nicholson will be hosting the event. "I literally texted our manager today and I was like, 'What the fuck Rick and Morty-ass timeline happened that I'm a professional Paris Hilton impersonator?'" Gottmik notes, jokingly. "That is so embarrassing." Violet replies, "The Drag Race thing, I fear, is going to haunt us for the rest of our lives." Paramount+/ Ginger Minj in promo image for RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 10; art made by Violet explains, "I got my haircut today…That's like my one little self-care thing. [But] it's June. I'm ran through. It's Pride Month, so I got to do my self-care moment…My barber's like, 'So have you been watching the latest season?' And I'm like… [Violet makes a face]." The Drag Race season 7 winner clarifies, "I love my barber. He's a gay bear. But…it's been 11 fucking years [since season 7], and because there's drama going on now on the show—" "What is the drama?" Gottmik asks. Violet says, "The drama is about Ginger [Minj]. I can't even… I'm so annoyed." "I saw," Gottmik replies. "Vanjie actually sent me a clip of it the other day, and I was so scared because I was like, 'Why did she send that to me?' Because she never sends me Drag Race stuff. I was like, 'Oh my god, am I like mentioned? Was Denali going off on Roscoe's or something?'" - YouTube After realizing that the clip from Roscoe's Tavern has nothing to do with either of the No Gorge cohosts, Violet starts discussing Roscoe's itself. "Girl, Roscoe's is like…" Violet starts, laughing. "I can't, I can't, I can't," she adds. While Gottmik appears to be avoiding that conversation, the season 13 finalist and All Stars 9 contestant circles back to that discourse right away. "I mean, that actually needs to be studied," Mik observes. "Some of these girls are ready to risk it all—" "Risk it all to sit on a fucking patio chair at some fucking bar," Violet argues. The No Gorge cohosts speak over each other during the next few seconds, but Violet alleges that queens accept these invitations even though "the bar is monetizing boots" on the tea they're spilling through the Roscoe's viewing parties live-streams. Gottmik adds, "And doesn't pay them to monetize…It's wild." Violet repeats, "The bar is monetizing boots on y'all basically spilling the tea. Get a podcast, girl. Why are you letting them monetize all the tea?" "No, it's so crazy to me," Gottmik comments. "Stop doing that," Violet adds. Gottmik circles back to the argument that queens "are ready to risk it all" by taking these viewing party gigs at Roscoe's. "Literally stop risking your careers for Roscoe's," the season 13 star declares before bursting out laughing. "Stop risking your careers for Roscoe's," Violet agrees. "We should make t-shirts." They both laugh again. Logo TV RuPaul's Drag Race season 7 winner Violet Chachki. Violet rationalizes that she's "catching strays" from All Stars 10 because her social media algorithm is showing her "Drag Race stuff about Ginger." Violet continues, "And people are basically tagging me — or I'm seeing stuff — saying that I shouldn't have won [season 7] 10 or 11 years ago, and that she [Ginger] should've won." Even though Violet seems annoyed by the algorithm showing her more "Drag Race stuff," Gottmik hilariously interrupts Violet to ask if Ginger was on her original season. (And yes, she was. That season's top 3 finale was between Ginger Minj, Pearl, and Violet Chachki. In the end, Violet was crowned America's Next Drag Superstar.) "And now people think Ginger should've have won your season?" Gottmik asks. Violet replies," Yes, instead of being on Drag Race 17 times." Gottmik asks "who else" was in the top 3 of season 7. Violet reminds Gottmik that it was Pearl, and they briefly reference the "Is there something on my face?" moment between Pearl and RuPaul in the Werk Room. "Also, Trixie and Katya are doing a Ru-watch of season 7," Violet brings up. "They wanted me to [be a part of it]." However, the crowned queen of season 7 explains why she feels that the invitation from Trixie and Katya was "so weird." "They had their assistant send me a DM asking me if I would send them a voice [recording]," Violet says. "It was like, 'What the fuck?' You guys, call me. You have my fucking phone." Violet adds, "Having your assistant reach out when you're friends with somebody is so like… 'Who do you think you are, girl?' Text me!" "No, they do it all the time," Gottmik responds. "I think they're probably forced, against their will." Violet says, "It's so weird. I would never have my assistant or producer reach out to someone I consider a friend. It's so weird. Anyways…" This portion of the No Gorge episode ends with Violet complaining that she "cannot escape" the ongoing Drag Race discourse. She muses, "Am I going to be like 50 fucking years old, and will I have to get plastic surgery to change how I look, [because] I just want to get my haircut?" Toward the end of this Roscoe's Tavern viewing party covering All Stars 10 episode 9 — which featured Alyssa Hunter and Kween Kong as special guests and took place just one day after this latest episode of No Gorge was released on YouTube — Naysha Lopez declares that she's been given "the green light to express my mind." "All jokes aside, I've been calling them Tweedledee and Tweedledum, and I can really go in…[But] I won't do that. I'm talking about Violet and Gottmik, two of the nicest queens from RuPaul's Drag Race," Naysha starts. "They have a podcast. They do a thing. Blah blah blah, whatever. And they were saying that they don't understand why queens risk their entire careers and come on Roscoe's and, you know, give the tea, and this and that, and blah blah blah." The former Miss Continental winner and All Stars 8 star continues, "Two things: When they come here… First off, this is one of the best places you could ever work. Ever. Every single queen that works here is treated like the queen that they are. The implication that they're coming here and we're just making money off them… Baby, every single one of these people up here is getting a check. Every single person is getting paid." "For someone to say, 'Why would you risk your career giving the tea?'" Naysha adds. "Correct me if I'm wrong on the numbers, but I'm gonna say about 90, 95 percent of the girls that have ever been on Drag Race come through this stage, and not one career has been ruined. Not one. And this goes for every single person that says I talk too much… Because yes, I do." Alyssa Hunter & Kween Kong - Roscoe's RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 10 Viewing Party! (VIP Edition) Naysha goes on, "But if you notice, whenever I interject or start talking about something, it's because they… [Naysha points to Alyssa and Kween to illustrate the point that queens starring in ongoing seasons are likely limited within the scope of what they can and cannot say.] When we have girls up there, I tell them what they can't say, and how they should word it: Their opinions, their feelings." "I've been on the show. I've read the contract. I know what you can and cannot do," she argues. "We're aware of it. You are not at risk for losing your career. On the contrary, we're giving you a platform to be yourself, to tell your side. And if the show did not highlight who you are as a person, I'm glad that for 2 hours and 30 minutes, you can do it right here." As the audience claps, cohost Batty Davis says that many queens have gotten redemption from the fandom by appearing on Roscoe's. "No one is here because they're forced to," Naysha points out. "Every single girl from that last season, it has now become, 'I got on Drag Race. When do I go to Roscoe's?' It's a thing." "No disrespect to Violet and her little minion… At all," Naysha concludes. "But when you're gonna say little things like this: Mean what you say, and say what you mean. Don't imply, because that's just lying." "And not to mention… Have we had them on this stage?" Naysha asks. Batty responds that yes, they have. Naysha adds, "Yes, we have. They've been through Roscoe's. They know what's up." - YouTube Violet and Gottmik were featured in a Roscoe's Tavern viewing party live-stream from May 28, 2022. That evening, cohosts Naysha and Batty, along with special guests Violet and Gottmik, watched episode 3 of All Stars 7, a.k.a. the all-winners season. Within the first 15 minutes of the live-stream, Naysha pointedly asked Violet and Gottmik about the response they had been receiving from fans as the two special cohosts of Fashion Photo RuView for the all-winners season of Drag Race. In case you don't remember: From the very first episode of that Fashion Photo RuView season, Violet and Gottmik received tons of scrutiny for negatively critiquing certain outfits worn by fan-favorite contestants. The fan response was particularly intense when Violet shared negative opinions about a look from Raja. On that particular Roscoe's viewing party live-stream, Violet and Gottmik got to speak their minds and share their side of the story even though they had already launched their joint No Gorge podcast at the time. Nonetheless, their statements at Roscoe's made the rounds on social media and helped diffuse the incredibly unfair — but very intense — wave of negativity they had been receiving for just expressing their opinions on runway looks. Editor's note: As of this writing, none of the queens mentioned in this story have shared additional comments about this situation. drops new episodes every Friday on . - YouTube This article originally appeared on Out: 'Drag Race's Naysha Lopez claps back at Violet Chachki & Gottmik's Roscoe's shade

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