QUEER EYE
The Fab 5 Take Over The big e asy
ANTONI, BOBBY, JONATHAN, KARAMO, AND TAN ON KEEPING THE BON TEMPS ROLLING FOR SEVEN SEASONS
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The Fab 5 Take Over The big e asy
ANTONI, BOBBY, JONATHAN, KARAMO, AND TAN ON KEEPING THE BON TEMPS ROLLING FOR SEVEN SEASONS
The Fab Five reflect on seven seasons of QueerEye, helping heroes, their special friendship, and if things really do ājust keep getting better.ā
Words Rachel Shatto
Photography NiƱo Munoz/Netflix
there be a more perfect setting for the seventh season of Queer Eye than New Orleans? Itās a notoriously warm and inviting place that brims with bright colors and vibrates with culture. Alternatively, itās also a city that has struggled to survive unfathomable tragedy; itās marked by trauma and pain, and in need of an infusion of hope. Itās not only a location but a metaphor for who the Fab Five are and is emblematic of their mission. For seven seasons (plus one in Japan) Antoni Porowski, Bobby Berk, Jonathan Van Ness, Karamo Brown, and Tan France have hit the road to inspire, heal, and bring hope to one āheroā at a time. They encounter no shortage of opportunities in NOLA.
In its seventh season, Queer Eye manages to remain just as hilarious, inspiring, and cathartic as it ever was. If anything, itās even more so, in a time when we are once again craving kindness and empathy to a degree we havenāt since the post-2016 election era ā which, coincidentally, was when the show first arrived on Netflix.
France will inevitably whip a āFrench tuckā friendly wardrobe into shape; Porowski will first smell his way through a kitchen nightmare and then craft a dream of a meal; Van Ness will joyfully espouse a poignant makeover; Berk will miraculously perform a full house transplant seemingly overnight; and Brown will reach into his heroās heart to pluck out, examine, and begin to heal traumas they didnāt even know existed.
Seven seasons is a massive accomplishment for any TV show, and no one is more surprised by the success and longevity of the
series than (most) of the Fab Five themselves. When asked if he believed it would run for seven seasons (or more), Berk laughs. āAbsolutely not!ā
āI literally can put myself right back in the car as we were leaving Mama Tammyeās, which was the last episode we filmed in [Georgia]. It was me and my other Fabbers and we were in the car. And literally, we were starving. And so we went to the McDonaldās drive-thru because it was the only thing available out in the middle of nowhere,ā he recalls. āWe were kind of saying our goodbyes. And we were like, āOh, this has been fun. But you know, this is probably the last time weāll work together.ā No oneās probably gonna watch the show. Like, itās been a blast to make it but good luck with everything!ā
This incredulous tone was echoed by all of Berkās costars, sans one: Brown. āI think all the rest of them are gonna say no, they did not think it,ā he predicts. āIām the opposite. I knew and believed.ā But this, he explains, was not born of ego but rather something he felt in the intentions of his soon-to-be costars the first day they all met.
āThe five of us actually got together on day one of the casting... we organically matched up,ā Brown recalls. āBecause we literally were the only ones in there who werenāt thinking about the show. We were all curious about who we were helping, and how fun it would be to help these people and like, oh my God, what cool things we could do. From day one.ā
He remembers that through the initial shoot that spirit remained and it gave him confidence in what
they were making. āTan was a little nervous. Antoni was a little nervous. But even through those nerves, we kept saying, āYou know what, we just want them to have the best experience. What can we do to make them have the best experience?ā Anytime in life when your intention and your motive is for someone elseās happiness, success always follows that,ā says Brown. āNone of us talked about the paycheck. None of us talked about fame. Weāre talking about how much we want to help.ā
After the show wrapped, the waiting game began, and Porowski recalls a moment before the show aired when he first wondered if it would change their lives. āI was actually chatting [about this] last time I went to visit Tan in Salt Lake,ā says Porowski. āI remember, he came on a family trip with me...it was right after we finished filming [season one] in Atlanta. Tan was wearing this ridiculous big straw conical hat so that he wouldnāt get sunburned. And weāre sitting in the water and just like looking out into the Caribbean. And weāre asking ourselves, like, āAre our lives going to change? Is anything going to be different at all? Or is this going to be a flash in the pan, one season will come out and then no oneās really going to catch on?ā We didnāt know, we [only] knew how much we enjoyed doing the show.ā
Cut to the day that the new Fab Five were announced. āI was in the middle of an Italian lesson because I was keeping myself busy at a friendās restaurant with my teacher. And thatās when news broke of who the new Fab Five were,ā Porowski recalls. āAnd I remember... my phone just started glowing with all of these followers and
Weāre in the trenches when weāre doing this show, and itās a beast of a show. It takes about a week per episode and itās incredibly emotional. Weāre usually somewhere incredibly warm. So weāve got the elements to contend with, weāve got the emotions of our heroes, weāve got our emotions. It is an incredibly emotional experience. But I will say I feel it even greater when I watched the season, back.
So for example, we donāt get the season until maybe a month before itās about to air. It usually is at least eight or nine months after weāve shot it. So you forget a lot of the minutiae of it. And I donāt see a lot of the other scenes, I seldom go to Karamoās, Bobbyās, Antoniās, or Jonathanās scenes. So it feels even more emotional watching it back. And then when they add in the music, and they add in the edit, they know how to get you.
I fall for it every time too. Iām like, oh, yeah, I was in that and yet Iām still emotional.
TAN ON GETTING
I was like, I think somethingās happening. And then it was just like an endless uphill from there, just like excitement and anxiety and like all the emotions in between.ā
For Berk, the moment he realized that the show really had legs was even more dramatic. āWe were in Swansea, Wales, BBC [Radio 1]ās biggest weekend ā itās like their Coachella,ā he says. They were in the artistsā tents listening as massive act after massive act, including Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift, took to the stage, and they listened as the crowds cheered in excitement. The Fab Five had been given the honor of going out on stage to say hello and introduce Olly Alexander and Years & Years, who would be performing. āWhen we walked up on stage, the crowd just flipped out, like more so than the other artistsā applause that I could hear. We were in a foreign country and ā I canāt remember if season two had come out already ā or maybe season two was about to come out. But to walk out on that stage and see a crowd of about 80,000 people just roar with excitement that we were there. It just blew my mind. I held it together on stage. But then as we got off stage, I went down to the right front stage to like, watch Olly and Years & Years perform. I just started bawling. I could not stop. People were looking at me, like, āAre you okay?ā And Iām like, āIām greatā And I tried to play it off. Iām like, āOllyās just so talented, heās just making me cry!āā Berk recalls with a laugh. āYeah,
that was the moment that I was like, holy shit. This. This is a global movement.ā
And that mission of kindness ā and fabulous makeovers ā has also meant that the Fab Five have spent the last six years going to places around the country, often on the forefront of the cultural pushback against the queer community, or that are home to the growing tsunami of legislation attacking gay and trans people, as well as drag performers. The experience has afforded them a unique and upfront view of the shifting political landscape. Their assessment of whether or not things indeed ājust keep getting betterā as their theme song purports is, sadly, pretty dire.
āI feel like, in the last six months, the world, especially for queer people, and LGBTQ+ people has gotten worse when I felt it had been getting better,ā says a resigned-sounding Berk. āThere are certain people out there that are using us and who we are and our mere existence to rally up votes and distract from the fact that they actually arenāt doing anything for their constituents other than coming for trans people and drag queens. You know, āHey, we donāt have a plan. So letās come after some marginalized communities and take the heat off of ourselves.ā I digress.ā
āThere is a sense of urgency within our community because there is just like a literal barrage of legislation against
Didnāt you think that my hair looked better than normal this season? I just felt like I really came to slay with the humidity this season ā and I felt like I achieved it. I also feel like: love New Orleans, loved our people, also loved that I discovered that I could start sweating from exactly on top of my spine.
I never knew that sweat can start directly between your shoulder blades on your spine. Not even in places where you would normally think you would start to sweat first. I could feel the bead it would develop between my shoulder blades. And then I would just get like this waterfall right down my spine. Itās the only place where Iāve ever experienced it.
There are sweat patterns that are unique to New Orleans, which I just thought was amazing.
the queer community,ā adds Van Ness. āI do feel, you know, more of a sense of targeting and I donāt exactly know what the strategy should be for us. Historically if you look, it seems like for a lot of marginalized communities, the story has gone that you take a few steps forward, and then thereās a little regression and then you take a few steps. So overall itās a positive trajectory, but not without a lot of consistent and frequent setbacks. And it seems like weāre in the midst of a pretty big setback at the moment.ā
It wasnāt just the hosts who were feeling the change of tone in the country, shares France. āYou can feel the weight of the pressure of whatās going on, in the U.S. in particular, on the queer community that we were helping every queer person that we worked with, you could tell that they were feeling it when we felt it,ā he says. āHowever, I also want to make this clear, and this is going to sound combative, and itās not meant to be, but things have been contentious for the last few years, including the white queer community. However, for people of color within the queer community, weāve been there, weāve seen this for a long time, but weāve had these pressures within our own microcommunities. And now it just seems to be more mainstream that people are talking about their disapproval of us. So, yes, it seems to have gotten worse over the last few years. But I will say that if you would speak to any person of color or anyone that doesnāt quite fit the white cis mold in the queer community, weāve been there.ā
The changing political terrain has affected the show over the years, too. āThere were some pressures in the very beginning to kind of make Queer Eye l ike the original Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. And Iām not saying that in a negative way. Iām not saying the people that wanted that were wrong. They had a beautiful, amazing, successful winning formula. Why would you mess with that?ā recalls Berk. āBut coming out of the situations in life that we were dealing with at the time we were like, āI think we kind of want to go in a different direction than that.āā
āWhen we first started, it felt like we were sharing a queer experience with a relatively conservative group who didnāt understand us,ā France notes. āThat was just like the opener, that was the teaser. And season after season the more we go into it, the more weāre really peeling
When weāre shooting in cities, we often donāt play tourist together. We can get away with individually weaving our way through crowds and cities without it becoming a thing. But when we are all five together in a public setting where there are no producers or cameras, to keep people at bay, it becomes quite a thing.
I remember one time in Australia, and this would have been like 2018, we decided we were just gonna go walk and have lunch together, we find this little restaurant, weāre having lunch together we werenāt thinking anything of it. We were just Insta Storying each other like we always did before, because again, this was 2018, and the show had barely come out.
Some kids at a university down the street saw our Insta Stories and recognized the restaurant. And in the middle of finals, half the university just abandoned their tests and ran to that restaurant. The police had to come crowd control.
It was a whole thing, so sadly we donāt really get to just be like, āHey weāre gonna go walk through Bourbon Street together.ā It becomes a whole thing. We do have a lot of great moments together at our houses.
āTHEREāS REALLY STRONG STORIES THAT YOU GET A LOT OF INFORMATION FROM WHEN YOU WATCH QUEEREYE.ā
ā JONATHAN VAN NESS
Iām just thankful⦠I look at the things that each of us do, and Iām blown away. I am blown away by Tan. Iām blown away. Because itās the hardest thing. I am someone who constantly has my own internal issues and struggles with my own body image and how I look because Iāve gained weight and I feel uncomfortable and blah, blah, blah. I would never be able to get on TV and try on clothes. Never. Never. And the way he comforts and makes people feel seen and makes them feel beautiful. Itās a gift.
Iām just gushing on them because I love them.
The way that Jonathan can make someone feel like a million bucks after three hours. And we know the power of the salon, but his joy and his empathy and his thoughtfulness in every moment. Also, as someone who is not Black, seeing him taking care with Black hair, Iām like, āYouāre a gift.ā
Letās not even go into what Bobby does to some of these homes, like I couldnāt even go there. Iāve been saying this since day one!
And then thereās Antoni, the way that he has care of food and he makes you just feel as if this is something thatās going to be better for you for your entire life. Iām just always amazed by all of us, even to this day.
back layers of what the queer community means or what marginalized groups are and what they look like. So as much as I love season one and season two, it felt very surface.ā
While Van Ness stops short of calling the show a type of activism, he does acknowledge it as a form of social good, particularly in its ability to uplift and highlight the voices of marginalized people and communities. āMaybe itās like activism adjacent or something,ā he says. āWe are in an age of so much tapping out and tuning out and not reaching out. And I do think that with Queer Eye , because of the stories that we tell, there is so much access to information.ā He points out how, this season, the show explores the plight of educators, the formerly incarcerated, disability rights, and New Orleans itself. āThereās really strong stories that you get a lot of information from when you watch Queer Eye,ā he adds.
Going back to film this season hit a little differently for the cast post-pandemic in the midst of a political shift ā and of course in New Orleans, post-Katrina. āThe devastation that New Orleans has experienced has created sort of a different feeling around, like, what do we deserve? And how do we make things better for ourselves and, like, weāre so beaten down,ā says Brown. āI saw that firsthand from speaking to everyone. There was still a hope. But there was a different hope than maybe our heroes in Atlanta or Kansas City, who, you know, yes, they might have had hardships, but they still believe.ā
It felt especially important this time around to Brown that he put in the work to make each week count for every hero. āThis season, I was getting deeper because I really wanted there to be longer-lasting effects and longerlasting changes. My scenes ran some of the longest Iāve ever run because I was spending two or three hours having a conversation with people. Because I just feel like I am not going to leave until we get to the deeper level of what that is.ā
One thing is certain, however, and thatās the impact the show has had on the Fab Five personally. As each episode wraps, itās evident the positive effect it has had on the heroesā lives ā but oftentimes you can sense that a change has occurred in the hosts as well.
āI grew up in an immigrant house, where judgment ran rampant,ā Brown
laughs āI donāt judge anymore... I immediately always say to myself, thereās a backstory here. And before you say something, or react, ask what is that backstory?ā
Practicing radical empathy week after week has helped Berk find more in his life as well. āEspecially after 2016, you became very like, āoh, here Iām deleting everybody that has a different opinion than me. I cannot deal with this anymore. Iām blocking him. Iām not talking to some family,āā he recalls. While he admittedly hasnāt let everyone back in for his own mental health, his approach is less rigid these days. āBecause of the show, itās kind of forced me to deal with it. And so I think it definitely made me more open and acceptingā¦[of] other peopleās points of view. I think a lot of people come to me, theyāre like, āoh, I just love the healing that youāve had with religion because of Queer Eye.ā But I canāt say that I have. I donāt think one ever makes peace with what I went through as a child in the church like that. Do I have more empathy and love for individuals in that? Yes, but have I made peace with religion? No. No, no, no.ā
While Brown and Berk have learned to see others in a new light, Van Ness has turned that lens inward. āI never
thought of myself as a leader. I never thought of myself as someone who was capable of ā Oh my God Iām gonna cry ā helping people change. I always was just trying to, like, not die of meth addiction or sexual compulsivity or all the things that I went through in my 20s,ā he shares. āSo coming through all of that and then seven seasons, everything thatās changed in the last six years in my life is such a stark contrast to what my life was like before.ā
The years have also forged a special bond between the Fab Five that is unlike any other theyāve experienced. āItās like a weird boy band syndrome where we get to vent to each other about stuff that you canāt to almost anybody else ,āsays Porowski. āItās like our own little safe space. And weāve been through it all together.ā
āDo we drive each other crazy sometimes sharing a trailer after seven seasons? Yeah, we do,ā Porowski admits. āBut as soon as filming is done, weāll go radio silent for like a month. And then one of us sends like a silly meme on our little group chat that we still have. And itās kind of like, āOkay, when are we doing it again?āā
Season seven of Queer Eye premieres May 12 on Netflix.
Iāve tried to think back. My therapist always says if itās hysterical, itās historical. So I tried to think like, as a kid was I obsessed with smell? I donāt know.
Iām just a sensory person. Right now just sitting in my living room I see 1-2-3-4-5-6-7 scented candles. I just love scents, whether theyāre good or whether theyāre bad.
Scents can be so nostalgic, even the gross ones, and not to get all philosophical on bad smells, but if youāre gonna appreciate the good smells, youāve got to appreciate the bad smells in life too. So you can appreciate the good smells even more, you know?
And itās curiosity! Do I regret it sometimes when I do it? Sure. But I still want to know what itās like. If anything, itās a reminder for me to check the expiration date on everything in my fridge to make sure that nothing gets to that state, which it never does!