The Bald and the Beautiful with Trixie and Katya - No Longer Homeless and Loving It with Miss Fame

Episode Date: February 2, 2021

Trixie and Katya are joined by the species-and-genre-defying Miss Fame, to talk about the futility of tik tok, the sadder side of fame, and the journey from humble beginnings to going shopping with ce...lebrities and not being able to afford anything. Follow Miss Fame: @MissFameNYC To follow Trixie: @TrixieMattel To follow Katya: @Katya_Zamo To listen to our podcast on YouTube: http://bit.ly/TBATBYT Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:44 Eligibility and member terms apply. All right. We are here once again with the bald and the beautiful. We are the bald. I am Trixie Mattel. I am also the bald. I am Katya. And we couldn't be more thrilled.
Starting point is 00:01:02 We have literally, I mean, somebody who transcends natural laws with beauty, age-defying, species-defying. Intergalactical. Yeah, planetary-defying. Oh, yeah, intercontinental. Oh, yeah, yes, citizen of the world. And literally someone whose literal brand identity and just soul is infused and informed by beauty.
Starting point is 00:01:29 Yeah, somebody who has suffered for their art, dedicated their lives to the simple pleasures of having something beautiful to look at on the planet. I'm practically a frontline worker. Thank you. You do eventually let people talk. No, you're fine. Actually, I prefer it this way. It's the nice option other than the voices inside my head, which are still very much there this many years later. We have to address something you said coming out of the pod a second ago that if you thought we would let go, you're living in a dream.
Starting point is 00:01:59 You said that you don't have a computer. No, I don't. Okay. You got it. I don't have a computer no i don't okay you gotta i don't have a computer perfect sense yeah it's not shocking it is is it is pretty it is um it's incredible but it's not shocking well here's the thing yeah no ask the question and i'll answer accordingly is there a question okay have you ever felt the temptation to get a computer? Yes, but I grew up in a house with my grandparents and we only had one to play solitaire. That was the only purpose for the computer that was in the house. Okay. I can relate.
Starting point is 00:02:36 I relate. Of a similar age. Are you 35? Yeah. And you? 35. Yeah. And how old are you?
Starting point is 00:02:42 38. Okay. 38. Yeah. You're like, what's that supposed to mean? I remember those solitaire programs on the good old DOS or whatever you called it. So when you use a computer, you're on your lovely husband's computer right now. Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:57 And I really don't know how to use them. I really know how to use. That's why I don't have TikTok. I don't have certain apps because I'm overwhelmed with the keeping up aspect of our young generation. It's too much all the time. I am so in my soul on a soul level. I am so appreciative that you don't have a TikTok. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Yeah. Same. You're missing nothing. I understand this. I keep thinking it's going to pass and it won't matter. I understand this. I keep thinking it's going to pass and it won't matter. It will not have mattered if you had this monumentous success,
Starting point is 00:03:33 except for those that are having success on TikTok or making a lot of money. So are they though? Maybe I feel like they are. Okay. Why are you looking at her? Does she have a TikTok? I mean, look at like Brittany Broski.
Starting point is 00:03:44 She just hosted something for like VH1. She was in a Super Bowl commercial. Oh, wow. She had viral TikTok. I don't understand. And I still haven't been able to fully comprehend how certain aspects of social media equate to becoming famous. Like you do something here and then you're working with like Jennifer Lopez. You know what I mean? Somebody that's given 30 plus years of her life
Starting point is 00:04:05 as a dedicated dancer and elevating her singing capabilities. I'm using her as an example because of her age and her dedication to some young person that has a phone that all of a sudden did something for a 15 minute or 15 second clip that makes them so important
Starting point is 00:04:21 that they get to stand and hold ground with somebody who's earned the right i might be totally controversial in that but i that's where i'm at it's wild no i'm glad you brought it up i think it has to do with think about it you're j-lo your diehard fans are probably mom at momish aged yeah right they grew up with you they love you so this is like probably like j-lo's team being like how do we indoctrinate the 18 to 25 year olds yeah we have to get somebody who's a celebrity to them yes to stand next to jennifer lopez which whatever those type of like marketing things have given many of us those type of
Starting point is 00:04:56 opportunities yeah we're like we need someone cool long before tiktok right yeah yeah but but it's but it's strange though it i was thinking the other day about tiktok and it's strange though I was thinking the other day about TikTok And it's like for me It doesn't make me It doesn't make the experience of music Any better Like for example when my favorite artist Recently released
Starting point is 00:05:16 This gorgeous song and music video And then also the TikTok Challenge to it And I'm like I could do without that part. I agree. You know what I mean? I know. It was a gorgeous, beautiful, like meaningful song.
Starting point is 00:05:30 And now there's a challenge. And I'm like, I can't do it. You know, whatever. I'm old. But maybe it's because I'm. No, it's not. It's some Russian lady. I always do this.
Starting point is 00:05:40 And this happens with even recording artists. When somebody comes out and everyone hypes them, I always feel like maybe this is just the way I'm wired. I resist it until I finally get it. And then when I get it, it makes sense because they've kind of claimed that space. And once they've claimed that space by repeating their brilliance and you see it continue, I'm like, oh, you've totally,
Starting point is 00:06:01 it makes sense why you have the success you do. I think that a lot of people now are still aspiring to become famous because of a void within themselves. They think, oh, if I make it there, it's going to equate. And a lot of these young people, let's say, I'm going to use another example. If you come from a famous family and then you're just ushered in in a nepotistic way into becoming famous, there is no struggle. They didn't have to break a barrier or a boundary.
Starting point is 00:06:31 It kind of was just, oh, I have a following because my mom is, name that person. And then all of a sudden we're watching you as a point of reference and having to pay you with some form of respect just because you were born underneath the name of somebody. And with us coming from our backgrounds, real people, real stories, fighting to claim space, building our lives, buying homes. Because Trixie, you just bought a house, right? Back in Chicago? Several. Several. So see, I mean, as I'm struggling here, don't let the gold frames fool you this is all an illusion darling it's all rented miss dame's like i don't have a computer and how many homes do you have but you've both had monumentous successes so when i see us having a breakthrough considering
Starting point is 00:07:17 we know elements of each other's human experience not to discredit these other people, but just taking this moment to say what we've done is so big and we still have to branch beyond the category that people place us in because we're still a certain kind of artist. So yes, respect and yes, breakthroughs and yes, there's money and there's all these things that come along with that. But what if the trend and hype around us changes in the next five years? We have to work harder to keep being that bad, bad bitch on top of our game. And these other people can dip away and come back and they're like, oh, well, you know, my house in the hills that my mom paid for. You know, maybe I'm just a bitter bitch. Because we have to work hard i'm behind the scenes practicing my 10 second tiktok dance yes yeah just just in case
Starting point is 00:08:13 but you can and ultimately i think the pursuit of being famous is you know fleeting noble Speak your plea. Miss Fame. Oh, I'm going to rebrand. Madam Fame. Right. First name is Miss. I often forget that you come from humble beginnings. The humblest. Yeah. Because you have a very regal, very poised, very articulate and stately kind of demeanor.
Starting point is 00:08:38 Yeah, for those of us who don't know, Miss Fame is a very celebrated makeup artist, model, drag queen, legend. But if they don't know you from television do you want to tell people about your modest humble beginnings what part the chickens um you know i i start with uh some today i was just talking to patrick about this i just got back from a booking in berlin i had to quarantine and COVID test and all that. And it was for television. So it was interesting to be a part of something. It's not out, but I'm going to talk in a general way to be able to give our point of elevated point of view. We find that we're getting to places where we're able to now give direction and dictate what is happening because people are looking at us with respect.
Starting point is 00:09:26 I want to keep that. And coming from where I come from, where I've created an idea around myself because of the way I grew up. And, you know, like anybody that grew up with a very toxic environment, I had a, I had a good family, but they really didn't have a clue of what they were experiencing with having a person like me in their family. So I don't know if I want to give them a co-sign it and say they just didn't have enough information. I think that I like to pressure people. And as a kid, I pressured people to try to understand differences. And I also was very like six years old, putting the pressure on your family. I did more aware understand differences. And I also was very, like six years old, putting the pressure on your family. I did more aware of differences. Yeah. I think let's expand your worldview, huh?
Starting point is 00:10:12 I'll just say this. My mother and father were severe drug addicts. My dad died super young. My mom lost the kids to the court. So I was a kid that was a part of the system. I had to go through the court system. I ended up getting adopted by my family. It was a hot mess for a really long time. And that was so persistent that when and I had my own issues with addiction. We've obviously had that moment on on Drag Race where we shared our personal journey and that, you know, getting sober and staying sober throughout the fame you know i was sober before drag race and then being so sober after drag race was such a challenge because it was less of a challenge about the relapse for me it was more the challenge of maintaining um sanity because i was like i'm fucking losing my mind and also i have created the idea of perfectionism on the outside. It's a, it's, it's a total protection because, uh, you know, I'm surrounded by these larger than life kind of fantastical creatures in fashion. And then knowing that they are just spiraling down themselves, they have their own
Starting point is 00:11:19 layers and complexities. And I think common. Yeah, go ahead. Is that common? That kind of like, it's a cliche of the fashion world, but are people, is it just us? They have money. They have like large quantities of money. They're backed by fashion houses. They've got a billion dollar backings to do these massive inputs in fashion. They are redirecting the narrative and it's like, you have to be connected and associated to it's just playing playing you know of course i'm passionate about it but everything's about connection and being associated to and for me i'm finding less of this interesting as i'm getting older i i want to be able to kind of enjoy things but with a light like a little bit less of an attachment to anything like what really
Starting point is 00:12:05 matters at the end of the day is like being with people that get you and um enjoying some of the simpler things like you know my dogs i mean we're not able to do the same things we were doing a year ago we aren't hopping everywhere i think it's ultimately part of what makes you so alluring is that you're obviously your dedication to beauty is so extreme and beautiful and inspiring but really only on your own terms ever yeah which i think is like really cool because somebody with your talent and like um your name and your respect you could have had a lot of opportunities to let people tell you when to show up and what to do and who's this person i might need that person you look you you're famous and respected and and so beautiful and anybody would die to look like you do in wet
Starting point is 00:12:52 hair in a trench coat that's not a read but you just like are you're so aspirational but it's because it's paired with the nicest person ever underneath yeah and your true desires to like go to switzerland and hang out with your husband and your dog yeah is like not something that a lot of people would let's just say have like the third eye to know to like follow that like will follow that indulgence you know yeah i think everything we do is intuition um i i will say i don't know if you're aware of that, but everything we've done, you know, any one of us has our moment where we've done something that is controversial or polarizing, or it's, it causes a riff in the system where people are like, what the fuck are you doing? And never, I can't write. Never have I ever, but I think that you've both been able
Starting point is 00:13:40 to find ways, I think in comedy and lightness, when you can shake, you can shake, um, you can spin it to where that people can comprehend it because it is funny. I mean, we're just trying to like show up and do what we got to do and keeping it lighthearted. I mean, of course there's a lot more, you know, I'm as heady as I was at drag race, except I don't have the pressure of a network and what's happening behind with production. So this is just my daily living. You're just happening to get me after I was on Facebook, like ranting back against Trump supporters because I was so frustrated. Barry, why are you on Facebook?
Starting point is 00:14:17 Wait, before we get into fame on Facebook, we're going to take a break. Yeah, let's take a quick break. Yeah, let's take a quick break. points on things that matter to you and your business, easily track those business expenses, and experience flexible Aventura rewards, you'll realize how much more rewarding your hustle can be. Get up to $1,800 in value when you apply for the CIBC Aventura Visa for Business at cibc.com slash aventurabusiness. Terms and conditions apply. Upper Canada College inspires boys from senior kindergarten to year 12 to find their passions and realize their potential. An IB World School, UCC offers a supportive environment, cutting-edge facilities, and a best-in-Canada financial assistance program.
Starting point is 00:15:15 UCC, a place where tradition, excellence, and innovation meet. Learn more at our open house events on October 15th and 16th. Register now at causeandeffect.ucc.on.ca. And we're back. Now let's talk about Famebook. We are? Yeah. Famebook.
Starting point is 00:15:32 The book. So basically, I moved here in September to Switzerland, and we came out here because there was nothing happening in New York, and I've lived in New York for a decade. You know, when a lot of girls after Drag Race end up in L.A., it seems to be like the best place to keep working because you can stay within the production loop. And maybe this is observational. I kind of felt like there was a conversation about it and I didn't take it. Is this something i'm curious
Starting point is 00:16:05 i'm curious myself what what do you think as as a like a pretty like uh almost lifelong new yorker like what what do you credit the the mass exodus to like why do they why does everybody move to la is it space is it opportunity i think because we've had so much success with uh the show with drag race everybody wants to keep that momentum. Like, obviously, you get off the show and it's your full responsibility to charge and maintain your title. Like, what you do needs to be in your hands, even if you have great representation. Or if you don't have representation, you can really direct the narrative. I came to Switzerland because my husband's Swiss.
Starting point is 00:16:43 I posted about it on Twitter and I tried to write in Twitter slang because you know, every platform has their own term of context of how you got this. And I'm not, I'm not that hip and cool. I'm really not at zero. And I wrote in a way that was like trying to speak to the kids on Twitter. And I totally got like devoured. And I said, listen, bitch, like, this is not, I wasn't coming to attack you when I posted a picture holding my dogs at a lake isolated. Oh, I remember this Mary.
Starting point is 00:17:09 That is legendary to me. I love it. When I think of the worst time of my life, I think of you naked glistening next to a lake with your dogs. And even I'm calmed by it. Instant serotonin boost. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Yeah. It's so fierce. But it is isolating. You know, you could be in the most beautiful place in the world and feel like, holy fuck, I have nobody around. Both good and bad. You need that. And it was like restorative. And a lot of people talked about the privilege perspective.
Starting point is 00:17:39 And I thought it's my husband is European. thought it's my husband is european it wasn't like i would never have been able to come to europe during this pandemic just because i was able to do it because i have i'm married to him yeah and uh when i did it i realized so many people were upset a lot of people talked about um how i left my family aka the rest of the u.s burning and i thought i'm not a frontline worker you're not a politician you're not a you're not a member of Congress or like a Senator. People in wigs are definition non-essential workers. Oh Mary. And it's like,
Starting point is 00:18:12 I'm, I think actually finally the, the convert this like bizarre, like haphazard conversation about, um, drag Queens being like automatic ambassadors and activists of their community is kind of getting like lessened because i you know that's something i've never really like you know understood and the
Starting point is 00:18:31 responsibility of drag entertainers is um as like the standard that we're kept to is like more stringent than politicians you know what i mean so it's like those kind of comments are crazy up and but do you like switzerland you know i've i don't it's not my city it's not my country i'm in zurich and i've realized it's it's a very the swiss are very internal people they're conservative and they are observational they'll see you but they won't really acknowledge you you you will be seen in a way but with a veil there was no, but with a veil. There was no parade. There was no parade. I was waiting because I guess I'm going to follow up on that. Because in certain cities in Europe, I feel like I make sense there. In Paris, it works and I feel stimulated. The beauty of being in Switzerland is that I didn't come here to, um,
Starting point is 00:19:25 well, I came here because we needed to change our scenario. My husband's going to be working here. And as a result, I'm surrounded by nature. This is good for my mind. Uh, you are the leaving.
Starting point is 00:19:36 You are on a parallel path to Pearl. Oh yes. Pearl's in Wigs in the Woods. Wigs in the Woods. And you're in this like the, the crisp Alpine, like a lake. And yeah, that's so funny funny you are guys are in a like a parallel journey yeah to the source nature is healing yes nature is healing and i yeah this is true i i definitely
Starting point is 00:19:55 think that this is a good um next step but i don't think it's my long-term step i think that i'll uh you know i want to live live close to New York or maybe in California. I'm from California. So I do feel kind of that pull to return at one point. But yeah. If you had, if money was no object and Patrick had any work opportunity that he wanted, where would you go to live if you had to choose one city for the rest of your life? I would probably get back to being close to New York. I still, although I hate the weather, I hate it so much. I still have so much admiration for the idea of what New York is. It's one of the most intuitive places. It felt right when I went there. And when I've like,
Starting point is 00:20:36 looked at being in Paris, Paris is good for one major element. It's strictly for my fashion identity, but it means i have a lot of pressure when i walk outside i have to care about how i look because people will see me and i feel like i've built a somewhat respectful relationship with the parisian fashionista kind of energy and those people that are within fashion um but like here i can i'm anonymous and i like that people it's i don't need the parade, but I also, I'm not able to build friendships the same way here in New York or California, make friends like effortlessly.
Starting point is 00:21:12 There's no queen here. I could just go and grab a coffee with, but it's also different times. Like it's during a pandemic where you can't just go and hang out with newbies. You kind of have your friends that, you know, you're safe with. Yeah. There's been a lot of people who moved to Los Angeles during this this time and i'm like how do you love it they're like who knows right i have no job and no friends and no restaurants and no bars yeah and jobs are different now you know a lot of it's like uh i haven't done fashion week since february february of 2020 i've
Starting point is 00:21:40 put everything off i declined attending anything because I thought it was in poor taste. I thought it's not the right moment to show up and be around a bunch of people because we don't have it all figured out yet. But at the same time, I feel like I am only human and I'm going to contradict that statement at one point in time because opportunities and work have to happen. We have to survive. Right. So when we inevitably take a job during this time during a pandemic how do we protect others and ourselves that's why i think it's really important we talk about uh your acknowledge i'll just say this one part because it is a form of protection when people come for you you're like i literally quarantine just to enter that next country that's like an hour flight away and i which means isolating in a hotel and testing repeatedly getting tested just to be on set. I was supposed to film something last month in Berlin.
Starting point is 00:22:33 It got canceled because some of the people on set had COVID the day of after quarantining for weeks, having to come back and do it. And I just got back. So it's very exhausting just to film one day's work it was it's like multiple weeks of quarantining alone in a hotel room this is what's happening just to enter berlin yeah from from zurich so i have to get like double tested for pit stop and i sit there alone and talk to the tv yeah not even a real person yeah yeah i worked on it act like all good i worked on a television like a scripted television show and it was like the movie outbreak i mean it was wild 12 months do you have tests on
Starting point is 00:23:12 set crazy you know testing there testing in the morning i mean um the most temp checks too like multiple times a day multiple um with the full face of makeup on mask shield it's like you know a lot it's just very very crazy you know it's a very different reality how did you protect protect your face from a mask i was holding it upon like walking in the building don't even get me started white skin red lipstick and i was like yeah i was like mama mama let's talk about the tip of the nose contour because that's the first thing to go. So unless you've, I mean,
Starting point is 00:23:46 I know this is more of a tricksy thing and maybe me too. Cause this is where a lot of my little detail work goes. Yeah. I would say what you do is detail. I would say I'm doing a hieroglyphics over here. You're doing a white worm with the mask on. I have to like, kind of not breathe.
Starting point is 00:24:02 And like, I was just at the Viacom building and I had to stand outside the door go like put it on and put it on in a way where I'm trying to like press it up to the nose and not pull on the nose and then get up there get my dressing room
Starting point is 00:24:15 and immediately snatch it off one thing I did too was liberally set that part of my face with powder oh yeah and then do the mask really good tip honestly if you really had to you really could just do like eyes and then get there into the bottom that's what i that's what
Starting point is 00:24:28 i have to do now if i have to enter a building and drag with a mask i just wait to do my lips there yeah um but now yeah while we have okay on the subject of beauty i just got your thank you by the way for sending me um the lip kit oh let's take a break let's take a break. Oh, yeah, a little... Let's take a quick break. Bye, Run. Originals, including Yellowstone. I'm gonna let the world know we're here. Light it up! And hits like Dexter. You're decent and good. I'm not.
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Starting point is 00:25:58 are your favorite and which ones have, if you don't mind, which ones sell the best? We want exact figures here. And down to the dollar. Patrick, my financing, if you don't mind, which ones sell the best? We want exact figures here. Yeah, and down to the dollar. Patrick, my financing, do you want the... We're just going to scrub through them quick on the call.
Starting point is 00:26:14 That other woman lipstick, let me just tell you really quick, so sorry. I used it, I put it on, and then I pressed the glitter into the lipstick, and it stayed. It stayed for hours. Yeah, without glue too, which is nice.
Starting point is 00:26:31 I did three lip sync performances on my little, just for myself. Yes. And it stayed. And I'm very aware of glitter lips looking hokey pokey sometimes, you know? Totally. And I really got to gotta like i'm very impressed it's very it's it's really great product and it looked fantastic thank you look crafty or like you know your glitters are fab they're so fine and so comfortable beautiful you know how
Starting point is 00:26:59 it goes and and i think that takes a bit of of knowing where your brand direction is, like from a brand to a brand, from the brand to the other brand. From the brand to a brand. No, but your brand is doing quite well and you have so many amazing products and your marketing is extraordinary. You really have it. Like we could obviously compliment each other. we could obviously compliment each other we we've we've seen each other come from walking into a work room and then to going out into the world and and in presenting our own experience like what a what an amazing success and uh with with regards to what is my favorite i i really love the lipsticks they're like my my top uh favorite thing like flash of flesh i wear that the most for fashion week yes it's a new it's
Starting point is 00:27:46 really good for fashion week yeah it's a nude with really not too much like rosiness it's truly like a flesh color yeah yeah yeah and how's your head is the best seller but that's obviously because of our origin story right and that's why we introduced that specific lipstick and it's the most uh user friendly i was gonna say this really looks like almost liner optional color like really throw it on it's like the color of my natural lip so i based that one more so off of somebody that that's afraid of makeup but it's a full coverage so depending on your skin tone you're going to get a payoff i i wanted to do something conditioning and I wanted the formula to be really, really perfect. So I spent a lot of time in the lab learning about how to create a
Starting point is 00:28:31 product. And that is so intense when you're in there because your, your whole future is on the line based off of what you're producing. You're like, this needs to work because people know me for this. It's exactly what I'm doing now. So I'm very proud about what I've created, but it is a lot of work. And, um, sometimes I think what else would I do if I wasn't doing this now, you know? And I think that's the question we've maybe all considered at times, but it's, it's like a fine balance. I think how I keep my, my drag, my drag interesting to me is by changing it up kind of within subtle adjustments. So after doing an album and touring on the bus with the girls for somewhat of a brief moment of my life, I stopped performing altogether because I just felt like I'm not going to be able to manage my image
Starting point is 00:29:25 if I'm working all these hours late at night and then going to another city, my skin's being compromised. And I was so concerned about how I was being physically affected by being on a tour bus. Like this is so exhausting and caring about then showing up to an editorial because I was between two worlds and fashion was my deepest passion protecting yourself is a totally valid thing can you talk a little bit about that like which that you're i mean just like the day-to-day the the miss fame like beauty regimen yeah i can imagine it's obsession fantastic by the way what's the six hours what's the process of preparing the body? Yeah, I don't work out. I eat light and yeah, water.
Starting point is 00:30:09 You guys saw me. I sit by the water with my dogs. That's it. Fresh infusions of alpine air. I eat a lot of chocolate. Sometimes I smoke cigarettes. I definitely, I think sleep is a huge factor. As we get older, we have to take like, rest is so essential or else you see it.
Starting point is 00:30:24 Like it's on the face. Everything that, whatever you do it shows up here large print honey in large pores honey large print in translated into multiple languages um botox fillers lasers facials uh laser hair removal blockers i've done it you name You name it. I have done it. Fiber blasting. Fiber. Yeah. Resurfacing, retexturing, remolding, crown molding. Vinyl siding.
Starting point is 00:30:54 Dave's got crime. Vinyl siding. Yeah. She's got aluminum ceiling spokes. I mean, oh God. But. Your skin. I mean, okay.
Starting point is 00:31:02 So it's, it's the 7.30 PM. Can you get close to the camera? 7.40 PM in Zurich right now. Wow. I don't know that you have makeup on right now. Your brows are perfectly manicured. Oh, I do. I have a little YSL highlighter under the eyes because I did just travel back from one day
Starting point is 00:31:17 of work and I was exhausted. Are you microbladed? Oh no, no, no. I just tweezed my eyebrows so thin for that one day of work. And then when I, because the work is so, it's different when we do drag race after drag race, you have this window where you're literally every single day is like heavy hit and you're out there in the, out there in the world, in a different city, in a different, not now, but before. And then when you have a bit more, well, you guys have been completely consumed
Starting point is 00:31:47 with being busy since kind of forever you're in it grizzled whores but i've taken a lot of space because i thought how can i sustain longevity for me um for me what that looked like was uh only showing up to specific things so i do couture and I do Fashion Week in Paris. I haven't really done New York in a while, a couple of years. And I started realizing that my presence at Front Rose and building this expert viewpoint, because there's only a few of us girls that are attending these shows. It's me, it's Violet and it's Aquaria. I'm sure at some point in time when we get back
Starting point is 00:32:25 to shows i know nikki doll's been to going to a few and at some point gg good will probably be at a few but this is it's kind of like where fashion pulls in a few girls that are like the it girl of of that season and also wanting to maintain that because what that looks like for somebody like myself is it can turn into a cosmetic contract, a fragrance contract, or walking in a show or being photographed for Vogue or, you know, and so these things that have happened in my career, when they started happening, they felt like and were career breakthroughs for drag or gender nonconforming people. Because in 2015, when I went to Cannes, they I don't recall ever seeing a drag queen
Starting point is 00:33:07 walk the red carpet for a cosmetic brand. I was there as a spokesmodel for L'Oreal. And since then, I was so hard set on keeping that and not losing those type of opportunities. And they're hard enough for girls like Karlie Kloss to maintain. Right. So I was like, it could be lost.
Starting point is 00:33:22 We haven't found it too difficult. Yeah. I mean, we really just show it too difficult yeah I mean personally oh I know and if I refuse to go they just bring the runway to my living room I can't escape them I gotta ask you about this about fashion week and about
Starting point is 00:33:35 attending fashion shows because I see the you know I see the photos on the on my phone and what I see is you know this stunning impossible incredible glamour effortless but what I see is, you know, this stunning, impossible, incredible glamour, effortless. But what I think about is horror, pain, humiliation. Personally, I'm like, what would it take for me to do that too? I mean, it just seems like a nightmare, the actual live reality of it. What is it actually like to attend a fashion
Starting point is 00:34:05 show in full, flawless drag? There's a few factors. There's a lot of fittings that happen in advance. And I built relationships with stylists that are connected to fashion houses that have decades of experience with all of the most major fashion houses. Meanwhile, certain designers are partial to certain Queens. So somebody might like Violet more than they like me, or they like Aquaria more than they like me. This is just, this is across the board. Somebody always has a favorite and I didn't win drag race.
Starting point is 00:34:35 So I, and I'd only done it the one time. So keeping myself relevant without constantly being on a network or a series means that I have to stay visible specifically through Instagram and specifically also I stopped doing YouTube like years ago I kind of got burned out the OG YouTube like makeup drag makeup you're the first person to lift the veil in any way yeah put that information out there not to mention thank you I'm just gonna say what no one says you did drag in a way that you did not pick up from drag queens in clubs. So you did drag makeup different than anyone had done it, really.
Starting point is 00:35:11 I loved getting painted by you for your YouTube channel. We just had a good time. It was a really, and thank you. It was really funny. And we laughed a lot and we were able to keep the engagement. I, did you laugh? I felt the fan. I went and performed that night and felt like the only person who ever had breasts, pussy, and like real hair growing out of my head. I felt like the only woman. You were kind of, I know you wanted to buy that synthetic wig.
Starting point is 00:35:40 I was plastered to your head that day. Well, I'm willing to sell it now now fashion is not what I thought it would let me ask you though like I wish she's a refugee next pat next pat in need like when these fashion shows do you get I mean I don't know I just think about the cliches of like fashion people do you get like do people quote unquote take you seriously are they nice or are do you ever like um is there a lot of pressure to maintain that like a perfect look all day in the daylight yes because sometimes you have several shows in a day and they're very important and you make them because it's it's a very political industry and you need to be aware that when you're invited you're being
Starting point is 00:36:20 invited by the house whoever's in control of the house or the designer themselves so for me with like kim jones and dior that was a connection because mark jacobs i'd painted mark jacobs for fun for youtube mark jacobs paid to place that image in um an anniversary issue of vogue where they ran a full page and he's like do you know expensive it is to run a page in vogue and it was just mark jacobs and drag from a selfie from snap uh snapchat that i took and it was like he was feeling that moment to then saying kim jones is being introduced and he's the um the creative director of dior and it's at drag con and then we're taking this photo and then I'm having lunch with Kim Jones. And then it's me, Kim Jones and Naomi Campbell in Soho talking, getting so much personal information. Like I should have written on an NDA because you cannot reshare what the fuck goes on there. Shopping at Supreme and knowing like there's no money on my card.
Starting point is 00:37:18 I can go shopping with these people. Naomi Campbell's like everything in here. They've already sent it to me, but that shirt would look good on you and she's so intimidating and i'm like how do i bridge the gap to this woman i've met her in fashion multiple times because of kim jones and mark jacobs sometimes she remembers me sometimes she doesn't and in different cities like paris new york and london all very luxury this is a very luxury conversation but I was like at the bottom of the totem pole, but opportunities were opening a dialogue. And I thought these experiences are things that I would, yeah,
Starting point is 00:37:51 I'm just like, keep it cool. But I was worried about how I was going to look showing up as Curtis versus as Miss fame, because they were meeting me as this ethereal creature in my real life. I don't, that's not my real life. I mean, yes, I was still pretty ethereal. You my real life i don't that's not my real life i mean yes you're still pretty ethereal you're not very beautiful but i'm good in the work because i'm dragging let's say that you're not the teeth are paid for yeah the teeth this is all paid for now everything from the neck
Starting point is 00:38:16 up that's been invested that's why you brought me to a place of level energy because this is something that when you get into the show you know they they joke in those memes it says when you're says when you're on drag race, you're the season you're on. And then all stars. And we all look like jacked up, pumped, filled and all that. It's like, yeah, we start investing in ourselves and we have to maintain ourselves. And maybe that's Botox and maybe that's new teeth. And maybe that's new hair and maybe that's new skin and maybe that's new clothing and all of these things come together because we, for the first time got a taste of what success is like when you start getting paid for your talent yeah so for the first time you get some money a lot for a lot of time you know i would say the politics of fashion are very very um intense uh you are around these people and you watch opportunities
Starting point is 00:39:00 kind of happen and you you find that a certain designer may favor you. Uh, but it's, it's where you're sitting when that show happens. Who are you sitting with? Are you in that shot? Is Anna Wintour three people away from you? It's so, so heady because it's not, um, organic. It's super constructed and, um, it's cure, you know, it's cure curated. And then as a result, you are, you have to reflect on all your wins that week and use it as collateral to get you into the right editorial placement to where the current collection of so-and-so so that you're positioned to potentially get a campaign. I'm exhausted just listening to you about it. I mean, this is like – I'm sure there's a lot of accidental rudeness too, like Naomi Campbell accidentally forgetting her name like Orville Peck was telling me he went to a Dior show and he was seated next to a certain Kim Kardashian West
Starting point is 00:39:49 and um maybe you can bleep that name out whatever yeah and they're in the front row Orville was invited of course the Kardashians were invited and they turned to him Orville was in head to toe Dior cowboy outfit right and they go this is, this is amazing. Is it real? And Orville's like, how would I be sitting in the front row of this show in a fake Dior outfit? Like, of course it's real. How would I have this seat from knocking off these outfits? As if it was a knockoff?
Starting point is 00:40:15 Is that a Santy Alley knockoff? Yes. And I just remember, they earnestly thought, like the irony of a Kardashian asking if something is real i guess i guess because it was one of a kind seriously sure sure you know that's so funny but i'm sure there's a lot of accidental sort of it's heady but you probably are so you're in drag you can't
Starting point is 00:40:38 take anything too seriously yeah but the other thing is trying to redirect these people to saying oh i'm not just serious I'm not just entertainment. I'm not here to entertain you. I'm invited as a guest just like you. The thing is, these people, this these other people, let's say Kim, Kim Kardashian's getting paid a lot of money to attend anything. She's not just showing up. I maybe I'm wrong, but I'm assuming. Well, no, I'm assuming she doesn't show up. Yeah, I work in accounting accounting my lipstick told me that um it's a tough road out there and i uh yeah i think that certain people get paid from what i
Starting point is 00:41:14 understand and what people tell me that there is a lot of money being directed around so trying to gain respect in this industry not only just to sit there and maybe sometimes receive a coat or receive a bag because the bag won't pay the rent, but it's a nice gesture. So having to stay around long enough that these designers inevitably will invest in you and say, Hey, we're going to throw you a contract, a multi-year contract that will keep you paid so that one day you can build your life because we want to keep you in fashion versus, Oh, how many times can you jump through hoops for us? So these are the things I, if I, and I've talked about this, I fired my agent at IMG. I was represented in Paris for five years
Starting point is 00:41:52 and I just had a meltdown during February of 2020, where I said, I'm no longer going to keep accepting bullshit because I'm literally out here knocking down doors and getting in and claiming opportunities, but you're sitting back here and wasting my time. And I went public with it and I thought maybe it's going to be, um, my house is on fire kind of situation. But at this point I'm getting older and I'm, my life is, this is like a comfortable experience where I'm at right now. I'm not fully comfortable, but I'm living in, I have an apartment here in Zurich. It's not my forever place. It's not the most ideal situation. I'm still not a homeowner. There's things I want to experience in my life, but I've taken decisions
Starting point is 00:42:33 that were really geared towards me satisfying my passion projects. I chose my passion projects over everything. And sometimes when you do that, you need to keep kind of one hand in this basket and one hand in this other basket so that you don't lose maybe your stability. And what I'm realizing now is I've put so much stock in passion projects that I'm trying to circle back to what really matters. And also looking back at where we all started, that when I moved to New York, I was hopping on couches and I was practicing. Well, I was homeless at times in New York. So this is actually a step in the right direction. It's not been an immediate win. I've never had an immediate hit. That's the name of your autobiography, Fame.
Starting point is 00:43:14 No longer homeless. Starving. No longer homeless and loving it. I'm in here. I'm giving you this deep dive, but this is kind of what I've been thinking about honestly on this podcast we try to you know buy sometimes accidentally touch on it but people's relationships with beauty and somebody like you who I mean I hope you give yourself credit you've only become more beautiful and iconic and somehow even more kind as the years
Starting point is 00:43:42 have gone by and you should be extremely proud of everything you've done with yourself. Yeah. It's so kind of you. And it's a refined, the image has become so refined in, um, we talk about you like this untouchable, like,
Starting point is 00:43:53 wouldn't it be crazy if some, if, if any of us, even for a second looked like that person, it's the, you know, for me, I focus on the hair sometime.
Starting point is 00:44:00 It's like the hair in this, it's this area, this, the, the temples, the eye, the hair, the it's this area this the the temples the eye the hair the hairline and i'm like not in one million motherfucking years could i ever like get to that point where it's so well done it's it's it is actually flawless not as a not using hyperbole and then and it just everything is so in place and it stays that way during the day at fucking fashion week.
Starting point is 00:44:28 It's like truly a marvel. Oh, that's the hardest thing. Daytime. Daytime, Mary. Realness. Without a veil. You cannot have bumpy skin. And I'm a person, I have acne prone skin.
Starting point is 00:44:38 You have to have the perfect moment. It always has to be, you can't have like a shit show. So that means literally going like raw vegan for weeks before fashion week getting that body line down eating taking like tons of supplements not smoking not eating sugar eating only living food and then getting to paris lost me at the second word that you said you just you know what they'll fame to be honest you know what people are gonna listen and think i sound like the most like upper crust, unobtainable. The reality is I've carved out an experience in this lifetime for moments.
Starting point is 00:45:14 That Fashion Week storyline is only for a fragment of my month, my week, my year. And then I go back to real life where, you know, like shit gets real and I'm at home and I'm like trying to figure out like the other shit going down in life. You're back to slinging roast beef and cheddar at Arby's. Yes! I will say your beauty is so inspiring because it's so peak and so perfect but having people like you in the world
Starting point is 00:45:39 is great because on one hand of course it's aspirational on the other hand it kind of takes the pressure off some of us that like you're there and like thank god she did that because the rest of us are like who could fault us yeah yeah yeah we're not her and no one expects us to be her but you know what i mean thank you i will say in response to that you can't when you set and when image is the only form of like how you're managing your monetary goal. Oh, beauty is what I'm using as collateral here.
Starting point is 00:46:10 It's a very dangerous road because you will have a your showroom for me will catch you and you'll literally be left. So thankfully, you know, using humor and using your intellect and finding other ways like become an expert. Like literally for me, here's where I'm going to sound and I'm going to use big smart words. Be the expert of whatever field you choose to be in so that when you age out and you're no longer the it factor, that your brain is so good at what you do that people will pay for your thought process around it. That you can literally step out, not be seen, and then you can throw information and advice. And I'm hoping that this works out for me in the end. I could just be fucking digging myself in a big golden hole.
Starting point is 00:46:48 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But I do, because my daily living isn't glamorous. It really isn't. I took a shower and I put on a fucking light for you guys. I put a light. I sat in my only room that's done in this fucking apartment. Everything else is boxes.
Starting point is 00:47:04 Which one? Can I ask a question? I have to ask. Yes. We're going to take another break just in case. So money is a thing, but it's not everything. I think you really look at the importance of what are you doing with your time? The conversations that we've had with our financial advisor is very much about building what that framework looks like that helps support those important things. The places where you're investing your time and your resources, your family clearly,
Starting point is 00:47:33 and those closest to you. Edward Jones. We do money differently. Visit edwardjones.ca slash different. This episode is brought to you by RBC Student Banking. POV, you're a student listening to an RBC ad. You're learning you can get up to $330 in value with RBC, including $100 when you open a no monthly fee RBC Advantage banking account for students.
Starting point is 00:47:56 So you can vibe with friends even more this semester. POV, you're unlocking more perks for less with RBC. Up to $330 in value is a combined total of three available offers, each in accordance with the respective terms and conditions. Limited time offer ends October 31st, 2024. Conditions apply. Visit rbc.com slash student offers. And I have to ask, because I know that there's going to be some Drag Race fans
Starting point is 00:48:16 who just would love to hear. Would you ever do, I don't want to say all-stars, but would you ever do like a network TV show, let's say a competition style show, judging? Glow show judging glow up or something like a makeup judging or something. Yes. I think I'm at a point where I find, as we just talked about, giving away that knowledge, that point of perspective. of perspective, I know what I'm good at. And I know that it's based around image and directing image and giving guidance to people that are equally as aspirational to make it in that field. But it's not just specific to fashion. You know, these kind of tips and advices could be given to anybody that does any form of drag, that does any form of anything that has a camera involved. You
Starting point is 00:49:04 know, knowing kind of body language but where your lighting is supposed to be what's going to flatter you the most we all pick up on this stuff our job puts us in a position where we start to accumulate i need this kind of light in order for my makeup to read tricksy yeah oh i mean yeah it's taking me a long time of confidence in front of the camera to be able to walk into a set and not feel like i'm overstepping my boundaries by telling people what the lights have to do for my style of yeah like i don't want to insult anybody you know some but i need you to blast me with a barn light yeah i don't want this i don't want to overhead i don't want side fills i need you to shoot me shoot me like oprah from the front her late 80s yeah and. And from the heart. It's not even hard, but it is interesting.
Starting point is 00:49:45 Hit them hard! Yeah. So what would be your... But yeah, I would love to be involved in that kind of experience. I think, you know, I'm starting to realize that having this dialogue is starting to come up more. I enjoy, I like real human exchanges. Right before Fashion Week and before COVID, the last show I was doing, I did this big interview for Mugler and with Loic Prigent,
Starting point is 00:50:08 who's like this fashion interviewer that's working with every influential and important fixture in fashion. He's got a very respectful and reputable career in fashion. And when I watched back the footage, because we always check how we've done and how it looks,
Starting point is 00:50:23 I thought I had fun I looked good those things matter and my kind of introspective conversation around fashion is like it's like this whimsical light-hearted approach but there's like it there's a form of knowledge that has come in through kind of being obsessed with beauty and women since the 90s because I was a child of the 80s and the 90s were my comprehensive years so i really got like what was happening when it was happening so i think seeing it all come together you get to a point where you start to have a confidence around what you do you just know what what works for you yeah you're an expert you're an expert you're an expert
Starting point is 00:51:01 it's the truth and i'm ready, I don't think anything really prepares you to shoot a drag queen like shooting drag queens. So you become an expert. You get used to like, oh, I remember what good light feels like in my eyes. Yeah. And like, you look at the camera and you feel,
Starting point is 00:51:18 you're like, this lighting feels like it's really not what it needs to be. When it's good, it's reassuring. You feel much better about everything that's going on that day. It takes one piece of the pressure off. And like with drag, I'm sorry
Starting point is 00:51:30 like, I know a lot of people think I'm Cindy Crawford but I'm actually not. I know. Cindy Crawfish. But like one, you know, five degrees of an angle of the chin and you know, in five little clicks of a light, it is like boot nasty.
Starting point is 00:51:47 Toe up, boot nasty. Like, you know, and then it's. Doc Brown. Yeah. Doc Brown. So, yeah, I mean, it's a tricky thing. I think we probably should have to wrap it up. Yeah, we're going to have to wrap it.
Starting point is 00:51:57 Let me ask you some. I want to ask you a really quick question, though. Yes. So speaking of 90s, 90s inspiration. Linda. Who would be Linda Your ultimate icon I don't know maybe
Starting point is 00:52:08 But go ahead ask the question Give me three Absolute beauty icons Fashion, beauty, whatever We're looking at this nude picture of you Sorry Oh yeah that was during the summer see i'm gonna bring this to a photo shoot the light doesn't feel right can you do more like this and we'll
Starting point is 00:52:30 hold up this yeah right yeah that was um uh beauty icons goddesses whatever you want to call them yeah linda evangelista always and she's always been it because she's really a master and she knows um and she's it's controlled but then, it's a very well studied art form. So she's up there. Uh, Kristen McManamy, because she's, um, this really odd character in fashion. It wasn't about, about conventional beauty and she was able to, uh, kind of carve out her own identity being the dirty couture, you know, kind of aspect of fashion. It was this unrefined identity, but then she could be expensive, which I liked this about her. Um, Naomi is still untouchable
Starting point is 00:53:15 and I'm using like the top girls, like not these secret sideline girls that were just, but, um, and Erin O'Connor, this is somebody that I've met in London. She's just she was a dancer. And I think she identifies more as a dancer than a model. But she's truly a model that has a dance background and her positioning and body language. It's a form of control that I do not have to the degree that a dancer does have. Yeah, come on. Let's practice those steps, honey. I know, right? I still don't. I can't move my legs in that way. I can stand, sit, and perch, but there's certain things like, you know, heels are uncomfortable.
Starting point is 00:53:54 But I know we've just maxed out, and I don't want to keep you. Oh, yeah. Listen, I'm so happy. This was so overdue. We couldn't have a pod about beauty without having somebody like you. You're such a legend. We just love you. Thank you so much. And thank you for sending me your makeup
Starting point is 00:54:05 because bitch, I really love it. I really love it. We talk about you all the time. I hope that's not weird. We talk about you all the time. No, I love you guys. I'm so proud of what you've been able to achieve. And like you've set the bar
Starting point is 00:54:20 and you've continually shown up for all the work and the dedication. And it's like, it's paying off every, I mean, it's fully paid off. You give me hope because it's truly a miracle that we were able to break through this hard. Viola told me yesterday, she's like, I'm so amazed with everything you've done because honestly, I didn't see it for you. No, it's hard. I can't believe how hard it is to keep managing it and you know how many people
Starting point is 00:54:45 tell us from our series they're like your season has had so many incredible stars like yeah your season still has some of the most influential people that have left drag race and gone on to change the narrative out there i keep saying change the narrative but we we have yeah and you know what your name is when people start listing those people. So congratulations. I can't wait till everything ends and you can come visit us in Los Angeles again. We miss you. Yes, please do.
Starting point is 00:55:11 And good luck in Zurich. Maybe I'll start painting faces again. Thank you, my love. I appreciate that. I love you, fam. Thank you so much. Bye.

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