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Raven drag queen
Raven drag queen












raven drag queen

Like any competition show, Raven said, "there are people who you're rooting for, and people who you're kind of going, 'Eh, I don't know about that.'" "A lot of people do get online, and their bravado is 110%, and people do and feel and say things in a different way when they're at a keyboard than they do when they're in person," Raven said, clarifying that the competitors "didn't take it to a place where you disliked them or thought, 'Oh, gosh, I hope they get eliminated.'" Raven said the electronic barriers between them do seem to make some of the competitors "a little less inhibited." It's just that there's no likelihood of it becoming a physical altercation." "I know it's happened for me, and I've seen it happen to plenty of other people. "When the chips start to fall the way they do - or the cookie crumbles, as they say - you start to see, slowly, people's emotions, and sometimes it gets the better of them," she said. Raven said drama becomes all but inevitable when you gather a group of people who are all under the impression that they deserve to win.

raven drag queen

When you're in a group, whether it be Zoom or in a physical meeting, there's always going to be a difference of opinion or banter," she said. Raven said fans who tune in to reality competition shows for the interpersonal drama shouldn't be worried that Painted with Raven's virtual format will stifle any egos. "Plus, it wouldn't be fair to the first season, saying 'OK, so we're no longer going to be doing this virtually, we're going to be in a studio.'" "I think that helps keep it its own thing, it's own different type of competition," Raven said. She said the show's format is unlikely to switch from virtual to in-person for future seasons, even once the pandemic has passed. "But even before that, were at home creating content for Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube - and a lot of people are consumers of beauty and makeup." "What are most people doing? They're staying at home," Raven said. Raven said the more she considered the concept, the more it made sense for a makeup-based reality competition show. I said, 'I actually really love this idea, and I think it is a lot of fun.'" Then as it unfolded and we talked about it more. "When they said, 'We want to do this show, but we're going to do it all through basically a Zoom call.' I said, 'You guys are nuts, this sounds crazy.'. Still, Raven was initially skeptical of the COVID-19-inspired virtual format when it was first discussed. Painted with Raven offers the perfect medium, Raven said, with the contestants being present virtually, rather than in person. Raven said there was one other obstacle: "I didn't really want to host something, I just wanted to kind of pop in and say 'Hey, I'm here!'" "I think it's good to sometimes just sit back and go, 'Let me just wait this one out,'" she said.














Raven drag queen