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  • - Hey, y'all we've got an exciting announcement.

  • Spectrum is now a game.

  • That's right, we've heard your cry.

  • We've just launched our Kickstarter.

  • So please go and support it now.

  • We hope you love it.

  • (upbeat music)

  • - I love bi men, I'm very attracted to trans men

  • but that would still make me gay though

  • 'cause they're all-

  • - That just means you're super gay.

  • (all laughing)

  • (upbeat music begins)

  • This remind at the marker game.

  • Like when trivia with like the marker in like seventh grade.

  • - [Interviewer] Who is most likely to pull a prank?

  • - Really?

  • - You did, you ripped up a donut.

  • - But that's only because he pulled so many pranks on me

  • that I was getting him back.

  • - Oh.

  • - Throughout the seasons, I think it's you.

  • - I'm like the least.

  • - Maybe him and I have have a better relationship

  • and he likes to pull pranks-

  • - You ripped off my toenail.

  • - Not to be a narcissist, but what about me?

  • - When do you ever

  • pull the prank? - What about you?

  • - I'm constantly, like whenever we're really tired

  • and it's been like a 12 hour day.

  • I'm like, "Oh, I just found out we have another six hours."

  • and then you guys all get into like a big huff about it.

  • - [Jonathan] You literally like never made that joke.

  • - [Interviewer] Who is more likely

  • to win America's Next Top Model?

  • - Oh. - Oh.

  • - [Interviewer] Three, two, one.

  • - Sorry, also me.

  • (Bobby laughing) Yeah.

  • - He has the look down.

  • - It's true.

  • - Tan?

  • She's seen every episode.

  • - Get your (beep) over here. (Bobby laughs)

  • - I just wanted to become-

  • - Get your (beep) over here right now.

  • - We don't want any fighting.

  • We're all standing in this lane.

  • - You know anything to do with Top Model is his.

  • (all talking at once)

  • - Thank you for your participation.

  • - [Interviewer] Who is more likely to tell it like it is?

  • - Oh, oh, oh.

  • - [Interviewer] Three, two, one, .

  • - Oh (beep) (beep) (beep).

  • Sorry, sorry, sorry.

  • I just, I'm very British.

  • (all laugh)

  • - [Interviewer] Who is more likely to send you

  • a thoughtful message or gift just because?

  • - That's cute Jackie, thanks baby.

  • - [Jonathan] You're really the only one

  • who does nice stuff for me.

  • - Oh. - (beep) you.

  • (all laugh)

  • - Karamo actually just randomly sends me messages.

  • - Antoni will often send gifts very sweetly.

  • - And he took you on that vacation.

  • - And he took me to vacation to Mexico.

  • - [Interviewer] Who is more likely

  • to get stopped on the street.

  • - Well, it's really Tan, but I'm gonna say Antoni only

  • because his reaction's the funniest.

  • He pretends like he doesn't see you.

  • - I get overwhelmed.

  • - Pretend, pretend to see me.

  • I'm Antoni and you be like someone getting excited.

  • - Oh my god, Antoni, Antoni.

  • Hey Antoni, Antoni, Antoni!

  • See me, love me, love me, see me!

  • (Bobby laughing) I love you.

  • - I'm out, goodbye, thank you.

  • This was so much fun.

  • - He used to get really nervous.

  • He used to get really really nervous.

  • - I get severe social anxiety

  • and I would just get really overwhelmed

  • and I'd get like severe palpitations and I sweat like crazy.

  • - [Interviewer] Being on Queer Eye was my dream.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - Once I heard about that audition, honey.

  • - (Bobby) Well, I still- - I was ready.

  • - Remember, I almost didn't show up to the auditions

  • 'cause I had a trip planned to Spain

  • and I was like there's no way I'm gonna get this.

  • I'm just gonna go to Spain.

  • - I've still never seen the American,

  • I've never seen the American-

  • - What? - [Jonathan] Oh my god really?

  • - Yeah.

  • I still remember exactly where I was.

  • I was at 3 Gold St.

  • - [Interviewer] Bobby, what were your thoughts

  • when you watched Queer Eye for the first time?

  • - I felt seen, you know, especially seeing somebody

  • like Tan, who was in the industry that I wanted to be in.

  • I felt like all those people my whole life that told me

  • I wouldn't amount to anything that I would never find love

  • that I would never be in a normal relationship.

  • I would never live a normal life.

  • The five of them proved that you could.

  • - I felt a deep, I have to say it.

  • I felt a deep tingling in my loins for Kyan.

  • - Oh God, yes.

  • - Yeah, he really-

  • - Oh yeah, I had a huge crush on Kyan.

  • - Oh my god.

  • - [Interviewer] I worry that the people we help

  • will fall back into their old lifestyles.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - I disagree, because even if they go back

  • to their own lifestyles, I like to think that

  • they had a nice little experience

  • and a moment in time they can go back to

  • whenever they're ready and they have that willingness.

  • - Listen, if you've chosen to disregard everything

  • we've said more fool you.

  • - I kind of agree that I worry about it sometimes.

  • - I think for my category, it's harder

  • because they're not just gonna throw out everything

  • I gave them.

  • - I don't know. (all laugh)

  • - Well sometimes they have!

  • - [Interviewer] Okay, this section is called Hot Takes

  • and we had our audience submit prompts

  • that they want to ask you guys.

  • - The back of this dress is really pretty,

  • so I better stay like this for this one.

  • - I've had a crush on another Fab Five member.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - I mean, yeah.

  • - That's rude.

  • - That is not true Antoni.

  • Get over there, get over there right now.

  • - [Tan] I don't believe you-

  • - [Jonathan] Get over there.

  • - You were in love with me for two seasons, come on.

  • When I first met Karamo, he knows this,

  • I had a real crush on Karamo.

  • - Me too, I really was like,

  • "Oh my god, like just (beep) split me in half."

  • That's how I felt.

  • - I didn't think that, - Oh.

  • but I just thought he'd be nice to make out with.

  • - I think we all equally found each other very attractive

  • in the beginning but then we all became

  • like brothers and friends and it, that never happened.

  • But of course in the beginning,

  • I think, yeah I was attracted to everybody.

  • - I genuinely love all of you, but I've never,

  • I know what a crush is like and it doesn't equate to that.

  • - I strongly disagree with him.

  • (Bobby laughs)

  • That's what I strongly disagree with.

  • I'm about to take this "strongly disagree" cone

  • and put it up where the sun doesn't shine

  • because it's not true.

  • - [Interviewer] I have the hardest job on the show.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - We'll just all go over here.

  • (Antoni laughs)

  • - Wow, I'm so shocked.

  • (Bobby laughing)

  • - Absolutely, absolutely.

  • - [Antoni] This, this is it. - Absolutely.

  • - This is it.

  • - This is what teamwork looks like.

  • - Yes.

  • - And then there's you two.

  • - Even though Bobby has to like build an entire house

  • and everything, I feel like doing hair is really hard

  • and sometimes people are really upset about it.

  • And sometimes I have to like

  • do haircuts on people who have no hair.

  • And that's really hard.

  • - I think I have the most time consuming job on our show.

  • I wouldn't say, I wouldn't say it's the hardest.

  • - Time consuming is, I'm just kidding.

  • - Because there's been episodes,

  • where Tan's had the hardest

  • where Antoni's had the hardest, when Jonathan,

  • we've all, our jobs have all been hard in different ways.

  • - Karamo's never had, oh no, yeah, yeah.

  • - Yeah, no.

  • He's definitely had some that have been hard to crack.

  • Would we agree with that?

  • - I was at the salon 12 hours one time.

  • - Girl, it takes me weeks to do episodes.

  • - Schmeeks, weeks.

  • - I would argue that a bolognese

  • can take three to four hours.

  • (Bobby laughs)

  • - [Interviewer] There were heroes

  • who were tough to work with.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • (Bobby laughing) - You idiot.

  • Yeah, there's been a lot of 'em that are hard.

  • I mean, our show is an emotional show.

  • There's a lot of times people don't want

  • to really go through the process

  • and it it's hard sometimes to,

  • I know Tan's definitely struggled with that.

  • - Willingness is not binary, it's not black and white.

  • It's not yes or no.

  • It comes in all the different shapes and forms

  • and we love all our heroes equally.

  • Can some of them be a pain in the ass at times?

  • Yeah! But do we give up, no!

  • - [Interviewer] Pronouns should be on all name tags.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - Yeah

  • - Tricky one.

  • I have a question before I make a decision,

  • what if the person hasn't figured out their pronouns yet

  • and they're uncomfortable and it's not something

  • that they feel comfortable assigning themselves to a label?

  • - You know the quickest way to make those people comfortable

  • make it mandatory for everybody.

  • - No, but if somebody's on their journey, it takes-

  • - What if somebody hasn't figured it out?

  • - If it was the norm, if it was the norm

  • for everyone to just have it.

  • - I feel like that, I feel, actually I'm gonna,

  • I feel like making someone label themselves

  • is what society's already trying to do.

  • (in southern accent) Are you a man? Are you a woman?

  • And you need to be.

  • (in normal voice)

  • I feel like making somebody label themselves

  • before they're ready is counter productive.

  • - I'm so torn on this one,

  • 'cause I can honestly stand at either end of this,

  • and I feel strongly about both.

  • - I think that we need to afford people time

  • to really figure out who they are, who they want to be,

  • how they represent themselves to the world.

  • - The thought of having to identify

  • with a pronoun being such a terrifying thing,

  • goes to show how much we should dismantle

  • the binary in the first place. - Yeah.

  • - 'Cause like that's part of

  • why I identify with he/she/they,

  • because I don't feel that I've ever fit within

  • the binary at all, so that's why

  • I feel really fluid to like flip between all of them.

  • I'm personally really tired of being misgendered.

  • And I think other people that live outside of

  • the gender binary are sick of it.

  • So it's like, if you just had it out there, it's like

  • it just makes it easier for people

  • to like navigate something.

  • - If they said, look, there are no more he, she.

  • There's only they, I could subscribe to that.

  • But I think if they are forced to figure out a label,

  • then I think we're forcing people to

  • do something that they may not feel comfortable with.

  • - Like it's forcing somebody to have

  • a very public journey before they may be ready for it.

  • - And part of why I'm torn,

  • maybe I might have like an internal confusion that's going

  • on right now with sexual- - But-

  • - Hold on, one sec, with sexuality and gender.

  • 'Cause for me sexuality, like if I came out as gay

  • and I felt like I couldn't take it back,

  • but maybe to your point, it's different with gender.

  • I just can't relate to it.

  • - [Interviewer] Gender isn't important.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - Wait?

  • What?

  • Maybe I misunderstood that.

  • 'Cause to me, like when I think of "is gender important"?

  • No, it's not, not in a way that it's not important

  • to think about.

  • For someone's journey, gender is important,

  • but like someone's definition of gender isn't necessarily.

  • - For some people, gender is incredibly important

  • to them and that helps dictate who they are

  • and who they get to be,

  • and how they get to feel most comfortable.

  • - I think there's been too much emphasis put on gender,

  • especially by commercialism of blue is for boys,

  • pink is for girls and this is what defines gender.

  • I think there's been too much defining gender

  • and I think that gender should be fluid

  • in whatever you feel inside, which is why to me,

  • I don't feel it's important.

  • - But because for some people it is important,

  • we have to respect that, and therefore it is important.

  • As a globe of humans.

  • Does that make sense?

  • - Yes, I strongly believe that it's very important,

  • because of all the violence against women

  • and the violence against trans people

  • and the violence it's like, so for me,

  • I feel like it's very important

  • because until we can dismantle

  • this oppressive, murderous gender binary

  • that we are living with, I feel like I-

  • - But Bobby's idea is the goal.

  • - [Jonathan] It's the goal.

  • - Yeah, to me I think of it as a goal,

  • that no, it's not important.

  • - That's what I'm saying, I understand the intention.

  • - [Jonathan] I love your intention. I think it's great.

  • - [Interviewer] I had a hard time accepting my sexuality.

  • - Did you say had?

  • - [Interviewer] Yes. - Oh.

  • - [Interviewer] Three, two, one, go.

  • - I'm from a very conservative community as you all know.

  • And so, I had time reconciling how it was gonna play out

  • in my future,

  • and so I always knew I was gay, I just didn't know if

  • it was something I was ever going to be able

  • to action without being possibly killed.

  • And so, so yeah, it was hard.

  • It was a hard time reconciling it,

  • but I always knew I was gay.

  • - Internally, I feel like I knew who I was

  • and I felt like I knew what my truth was.

  • I felt like the outside world had like

  • a bigger problem with it.

  • - I struggled with it, I think.

  • A little like post-puberty, when I realized

  • that I was attracted to boys and girls,

  • honestly though, even just before Queer Eye,

  • I had a lot of people in my life who just assumed that

  • I was straight.

  • Landing that job and having my life change

  • and all of the jobs and everything gave me this

  • like confidence that I didn't have before.

  • - [Interviewer] Queer representation in media

  • has become way better.

  • Three, two, one, go.

  • - Yeah.

  • - The fact that I'm allowed on TV

  • and I don't mean allowed as in somebody gave me permission,

  • but the fact that there's somebody like me on TV,

  • blows my mind. I never thought in my lifetime

  • a Muslim, queer, brown person would be on TV.

  • - With perfect hair.

  • - With gorgeous hair. (all laugh)

  • - Yeah, when I was little the only person

  • that was out was Ellen,

  • and obviously that didn't end well for her then.

  • And then Will and Grace, that wasn't even when I was little,

  • that was still like early twenties.

  • And I still think there's a lot of broadcast shows

  • that there's zero representation in and there won't be

  • because that demographic won't be okay with it.

  • - It still makes headlines whenever there's like

  • a queer story that's at the forefront of the leading people.

  • Whether it's people of color, anybody queer,

  • it still makes like a big splash,

  • and it's like treated as it's like a big deal,

  • so it's not normalized yet.

  • - There are still movies being banned

  • in Middle Eastern countries.

  • - Even just like here, we have like so many,

  • you know, state legislatures that are trying to ban books,

  • 'cause they're silly, silly, silly sillies.

  • - [Interviewer] We are truly making a difference

  • in the world.

  • Three, two, one, go

  • - Getting picked up from my house,

  • on the way to the airport yesterday morning

  • a 70-year-old white man driver pulls up,

  • and I get in the car and he looks at me and he goes,

  • "I just have to say your show has changed my family's life.

  • My daughter's 27 and she is transitioning

  • and we couldn't relate, we couldn't understand.

  • And we watched your show,

  • and it allows us to be able to understand our daughter

  • and what she is going through,

  • and you guys have helped my family heal

  • and be there for our daughter when there's no way

  • we could have before."

  • Moments like that really make me proud of what we do,

  • and make anything that, you know, hot days, this and that.

  • - [Antoni] Yeah.

  • - Make it all worth it.

  • - [Jonathan] Cause the reason that I stopped on "somewhat",

  • is I was like, oh, but there's always more.

  • We could always be doing more.

  • We could always be making more progress.

  • But I feel like what we're all doing,

  • what we're all bringing.

  • I do feel like we are changing the perceptions

  • and I do feel like we're making a difference.

  • And I feel really strongly about that.

  • - Out of all the human interactions that we've had,

  • and it's like, yes, I get very overwhelmed

  • when people stop me.

  • But like it never gets old when you see

  • like multiple generations of families stop you

  • at an airport and be like, this is a show that we can watch

  • as a family.

  • I never thought I was gonna be part of that narrative.

  • I'm still shocked by it.

  • - I know it may seem arrogant to suggest

  • that the work that we're doing impacts the world

  • and makes a difference.

  • However, having kids from Pakistan message to say,

  • "I never believed there was a future for me.

  • I thought maybe that by the time I hit my twenties

  • which is when we're meant to get married,

  • I'd have to kill my self."

  • To know that you are out there.

  • You've got a partner.

  • You've now got a child you've lived a life that you

  • that was normal for you

  • and your country is in a place that

  • I dream our country will be that kind of inspiration.

  • I, it is priceless.

  • I don't think that any of us can really quantify

  • what impact we make on the kids in villages in Pakistan,

  • who've never, ever, ever believed

  • that they have a life past 20.

  • That blows my mind.

  • That's changing the world.

  • (all cheering)

  • - Come on, come here, Jackie.

  • (indistinct talking)

  • - Karamo, we're thinking,

  • I don't know why I looked up.

  • Karamo, we're thinking about you.

  • - Gone too soon.

  • - Do you wanna make it clear?

  • Karamo's just not feeling very well.

  • He's back, we are still the Fab Five.

  • (all cheering)

  • - Watch the lights!

  • - Whoops.

  • I said "ow", but it didn't hurt.

  • - [All] Thank you.

  • - [Jonathan] Thanks, everyone.

- Hey, y'all we've got an exciting announcement.

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Do The Fab Five Members Think The Same? | SPECTRUM x Queer Eye

  • 13 0
    Kamikiseto Jyurai に公開 2022 年 05 月 07 日
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