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This is the eleventh installment in an ongoing series that explores drag culture and the nightlife scene in Brooklyn, N. Over the past several years, following the large-scale exodus of artists across the East River and into northern Brooklyn, those engaged in drag culture in this outer borough have created a new, queer world entirely their own.
Accompanied by a larger movement to understand drag culture outside of the pageant circuit, many individuals engaged in the drag community in this borough approach drag culture through a nontraditional lens of "alternative" drag or performance art, enabled largely by the malleable and queer nature of this part of New York.
Visit HuffPost Gay Voices regularly to learn not only about the individuals involved in Brooklyn's drag community, but more about the culture of the community itself.
The Huffington Post: How did you get your start in the drag world? Hamm Samwich: By failing repeatedly to get any kind of real job. Describe the drag scene and community in Brooklyn -- how is it different from drag culture elsewhere? Drag culture everywhere else is ugly and lame and stupid and has too many sequins and sucks?
What role do you see drag culture playing in the trajectory of the changing landscape of Brooklyn itself? What is there to get? Just shut the fuck up and come to the bar. Or would you rather that Brent Corrigan hosted everything? What does it mean to you to be a drag queen or a drag performer? I think the essence of drag is saying no. Your piety is just more drag.