Shows featuring drag queens reading to young children have proven increasingly popular – but they are also attracting angry protests. How have we reached a place where these joyful events are seen as a threat to infants?

In February 2020, I took my three-year-old daughter to a local pub for an event that sounded intriguing. It was called Drag Queen Story Hour. I thought it may be right up her street – glitter, stories, wigs – and offer her the chance to learn something about difference and respect along the way. I also liked the idea of doing something different, although the main appeal was free child entertainment and the fact that my partner and I could have a roast and a pint of Guinness while we watched.

As predicted, the kids in attendance went absolutely wild: screaming and dancing during the interactive bits, rushing to get their pictures taken afterwards with Aida H Dee, a fabulous character whom my daughter insisted was a “dragon queen”. Two years on, she still does a good impression of the funny voices Aida H Dee would adopt for the characters.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Curfews and quarantines: Europe faces another Easter of Covid restrictions

From France to Spain, Germany to Greece, tight rules are in place…

The Guardian view on soaring energy bills: the less well-off need a new deal | Editorial

The government must act to protect those on limited incomes from unaffordable…

Dropping green pledges would be ‘political suicide’, Sunak and Starmer warned

Science and business leaders say lurch away from climate agenda after byelections…