· Special Guest: Gloria
Allred, Candis Cayne and Mathu Anderson
· Main
Challenge: Star in RuPaul's music video "The Beginning" and
shooting a court-room scene
Seeing Detox get sent home was tough, but hearing Roxxxy complain
afterward is even tougher. Her whining makes me want to abandon her at a bus
stop. (Too soon?) Not that she’s content to keep her negative emotions to
herself. Like peanut butter, she has negativity to spread around, and I bet
you’ll never guess who she shares it with. Jinkx! (Did you shout that at your
screen like Dora the Explorer? Please say you did.) If you love hearing a
bitter underperformer snipe at her highly praised rival, then this is just the
broken record for you! While the others squabble, Alaska perches sourly on a
table like a hairless cat that is none too happy to have been dressed in frilly
panties. We’re in a bad mood today, aren’t we, Miss Kitty? Does someone need a
treat?
The following day, spirits are no brighter. Detox manages to throw
shade from beyond the grave by pointedly not leaving a note for Jinkx, though
Roxxxy dives in with the assist by narrating what she assumes would have been
written. It’s a good thing she found drag, because she’s not cut out for the
greeting card industry. Ru, of course, would be a natural. Her final
installment in this season’s series of SheMail videos makes me wish she would
drag up all my communications. Like, imagine how much better work emails would
be. “Girl, your project must have skipped a pill, because it’s LATE.”
The rest of the episode is so jam packed with queenly goodness that
there’s no room for a mini-challenge. Hell, there’s not even room for a
workroom appearance in Ru’s schedule, so she sends Michelle Visage on her
behalf. The Noisy from Joisey explains that the girls will face a trilogy of
trials not quite as epic and gay as The Lord of the Rings.
First, they’ll perform choreography for a “The Beginning” music
video, because iTunes downloads are the only things keeping the lights on at
Logo headquarters. Next, they’ll get all split personality and portray witness,
defense attorney, and prosecutor in three courtroom scenes. Last on the docket
is the chance to make their case in front of the panel (nay, the nation!),
explaining why they deserve the custom-made crown. Roxxxy chimes in that this
is the chance she’s been waiting for. Delicate flower that she is, she’s just
been too shy and demure to ever suggest that she should win and everyone else
should go home. Certainly, no cameras were ever around to document such
sentiments constantly escaping her lips.
The dance lesson with Candis Cayne yields predictable problems for
Alaska, who is so uneasy on her feet that I suspect she might be a clever ruse
by the kids from the
Snickers commercial. At least Jinkx joins her in the underdog category when
hairography gets introduced. (Glee technically introduced it first,
but whatever.) When you’re getting a mouthful of synthetic wig crammed down
your throat by a person-sized fan, it’s nice to have company. The video shoot
holds no surprises other than the fact that it’s being directed by George R. R.
Martin’s malnourished younger brother. Roxxxy can lip sync at lightning speed
while whipping her chiffon back and forth, and Jinkx can at least hold her own,
but Alaska is as far from success as her namesake is from the contiguous 48
states.
There’s also some business with a convertible. Basement Santa
explains that they’ll be driving to Heaven, but his sunken psychopath eyes
suggest that it’ll be more like Thelma & Louise than Grease.
No season would be complete without a Tic Tac luncheon, so Ru takes
a brief moment to check in with each of her girls and make sure she’s wrung
them absolutely dry of dramatic possibilities. Jinkx realizes that her MILF
character might have evolved to fill the void left by her absent mother figure,
which sounds Norman Bates-ier than she maybe intended. Roxxxy reasserts her
desire to represent the big girls, though the big girls in my apartment have
vociferously rejected her offer. Smart little Alaska made sure to save a few
tears for the end, though, and throws down some doom and gloom about her fear
of dying. I hope it was just strategy; she’s not dying, is she?
Since the final challenge will involve delivering a closing
argument, each of the ladies also gets to meet with Gloria Allred. The gravity
with which the legendary lawyer approaches her task threatens to implode the
Silver Lounge, but she manages to give each participant some sound advice
before structural integrity is compromised.
Next, we’re finally given the Judge Rudy trial reenactment we’ve
been promised since this season’s first preview. Roxxxy’s limited range is
immediately apparent; while her competitors depict Cher on Klonopin and
chicken-fried Lucille Ball, she’s delivering innovative flavors like “me” and
“bitch.” Meth-Addicted Saruman is unimpressed.
Afterward, Roxxxy knows she did poorly and spews a manic diatribe
attempting to justify the failure. Her assertion that she takes drag too seriously
to ever laugh at it is so blatantly ridiculous that the other two can’t even
find it insulting. Plus, it’s tough to see her as a threat when she’s wearing
her make-up dress. Which, by the way, must reek by now. I hope the Pit Crew
scrubs that thing on their washboard abs after everyone goes home at night.
On the catwalk, each contestant gives her final look and speech.
Roxxxy, in green and purple paisley “sequence,” says she hopes children will
look up to her (and, implicitly, not run away screaming). Her strengths, she
explains, are grace and professionalism, which she shows by interrupting Alaska
later. Jinkx’s look is a little bland, but her story about being an outcast and
an underdog who has learned to adapt feels heartfelt. Otherworldly Alaska lays
down fashion freakiness with her white lace gown and browless make-up look
while rousing the crowd with a stirring oration about how she turns tragic to
magic, trash to treasure, and Party City to… well, that stays Party City.
And that’s pretty much it. The deliberation is inconclusively
even-handed and the lip sync to Ru’s single is excitement-free. We won’t know
who wins for another two weeks! I’m suddenly able to understand Alaska’s
preoccupation with an early demise. What if something kills me before the
finale? I’m pretty clumsy.
I think that somewhere along the line the original message of this show was lost and it has now degenerated into just another tired showcase for bad behavior, poor sportsman/womanship and what str8's believe to be stereotypically "Gay" behavior.
ReplyDeleteRuPaul, did you sell out for the Money, honey??
I often wonder where Ru is when the catty things start happening.
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