Bad bony gay
Bad Bunny talks sexual fluidity in fresh interview
Sasha Colby didn’t set out to become “your favorite drag queen’s favorite drag queen.” It just kind of happened.
“You know, I was so stoned,” she admitted with a laugh, recalling the filming of her “Meet the Queens” promo. “We were about to sit down for the interview, and they were fancy , ‘Oh, just consider of something, favor a catchphrase you want to say.’” What came out was a now-iconic phrase that captured the truth: Colby is the queen’s queen, beloved by legends, adored by fans, and deeply respected in her craft. “It came out of the deep crevices in here,” she said, pointing to her head.
She thinks RuPaul might have planted the seed: “Ru had said on the main stage once, ‘You’re a drag queen’s performative queen — you’re what drag queens watch.’ And maybe that stuck in my head and just kind of … word association.”
And she’s only getting started.
After making history as the first out trans winner of “RuPaul’s Performative Race” to headline a Live Nation tour, Colby is hitting the thoroughfare again this descend. Her “Stripped II” tour kicks off Sept. 16 in Seattle and wraps up in Hawaii, where she’ll fetch her artistry entire circle back house. This time,
Can a straight man turn into a queer icon in 2020, when sexuality, as well as gender meanings, are undergoing significant change? Rapper Bad Bunny has long supported LGBTQ causes, yet until now, he has never spoken out about his sexual orientation. So, many fans wonder, “Is Bad Bunny gay?”
1. Is Bad Bunny gay? “I am heterosexual, and I like women”, Terrible Bunny confirms
In an interview with the LA Times, the Puerto Rican recording artist discussed the issue and said that, appreciate many people in his generation, he perceives himself as fluid.
He continues, “But at the moment, I am heterosexual, and I like women,” in an interview with the LA Times.
One of the ablest stream artists worldwide, the 28-year-old rapper has extended supported the LGBTQ people. He led demonstrations against the governor of Puerto Rico as well as his views on sexuality and gender identity. His videos have featured homosexual couples as well as transgender women. On social networks, he has praised women who don’t shave their body hair, named a nail salon that refused to serve him, and criticized reggaeton singer Don Omar for making homophobic remarks.
When his harmony video for “Caro&
Before Bad Bunny: Eight trailblazing queer icons from Puerto Rico
Since the dawn of the 2020s, Puerto Rico’s Bad Bunny has captured the attention of the global queer planet by donning flamboyant in a tune video, honoring a murdered trans female on “The Tonight Show,” locking lips with his male backup dancer at MTV's Video Harmony Awards and, most recently,kissing Gael García Bernal in the new movie “Cassandro.”
No less than Ricky Martin has called Bad Bunny, Puerto Rico’s latest hijofavorito, “an icon for the Latin gay community.” But the trap musician — who has described his views on sexuality as fluid but has previously self-identified as heterosexual — is just the latest in a long line of queer icons to hail from Puerto Rico, a pantheon including activists, an athlete, an astrologer, the highest-seated judge in the land — and, of course, Martin himself.
Ricky Martin
Before Awful Bunny even took his first breath, Ricky Martin was well on his way to becoming Puerto Rico’s biggest musical export of all time. Born Enrique Martín Morales in 1971 in San Juan, Martin rose to fame as a member of the rotating-member boy band Menudo from 1984 to 1989. As Martin’s fame as a solo artis
How Bad Bunny's gender fluidity is shaking up a genre, empowering the Latino LGBTQ community
Bad Bunny is leading a reggaeton revolution – and a queer one at that.
The 29-year-old, whose "Un Verano Sin Ti" album was the most-streamed worldwide in 2022, has been named Spotify's most-streamed artist three years in a row, won three Grammys and continues to break his own records in a genre that's traditionally hyper-masculine.
He's also kissed a male backup dancer onstage. He dressed in drag for the "Yo Perreo Sola" music video and wore a skirt on a "Tonight Show" appearance. He straight-up told the Los Angles Times, "I don't know if in 20 years I will like a human. One never knows in life."
Many have speculated about his sexual identity, but Bad Bunny hasn't allowed himself to be labeled. After all, he's been clear that "Yo Hago Lo Que Me Da La Gana" ("I Carry out Whatever I Want").
He has artfully challenged homophobia in reggaeton, critiqued masculinity in the Latino community and been an ally to the LGBTQ community.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle."Even though (Bad Bunny) hasn't approach out and specified his sexual orientation, he has elevated the conversa