Premium Content:

RuPaul's Drag Race Portuguese translation of 'Sashay Away' is brutal

International RuPaul’s Drag Race fans have notice something a little different about the Portuguese translation of the hit reality series.

- Advertisement -

RuPaul’s iconic line, ‘Sashay Away’, spoken to contestants when it’s their time to leave the show, has a very different vibe in the European language.

Phi_lipi of Twitter posted a screen capture of the newly translated program with subtitles, which instead of ‘Sashay Away’ reads “Bye, go home, no one loves you.”


While RuPaul is known for showing tough love to the competing queens, this is of course not what she says in the original iteration of the show… but it could well be what she is thinking.

OIP Staff


Support OUTinPerth

Thanks for reading OUTinPerth. We can only create LGBTIQA+ focused media with your help.

If you can help support our work, please consider assisting us through a one-off contribution to our GoFundMe campaign, or a regular contribution through our Patreon appeal.

Become a Supporter→     Make a contribution→ 

 

Latest

The Year in Review: February 2024

See all the things that we covered in February 2024.

On This Gay Day | The USA’s ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy begins

The new rules prohibited discrimination and harassment of closeted members of the armed forces.

WA government open to banning protesting in vicinity of places of worship

Would banning protests within 150m of places of worship curb our right to protest?

Electric Fields bring uplifting joy on their first album

Michel Ross chats to OUTinPerth about their love recording with a symphony orchestra.

Newsletter

Don't miss

The Year in Review: February 2024

See all the things that we covered in February 2024.

On This Gay Day | The USA’s ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy begins

The new rules prohibited discrimination and harassment of closeted members of the armed forces.

WA government open to banning protesting in vicinity of places of worship

Would banning protests within 150m of places of worship curb our right to protest?

Electric Fields bring uplifting joy on their first album

Michel Ross chats to OUTinPerth about their love recording with a symphony orchestra.

New stats from the ABS show first estimates of Australia’s LGBTI+ population

Report suggests over 900,000 people are part of the LGBTI population.

The Year in Review: February 2024

See all the things that we covered in February 2024.

On This Gay Day | The USA’s ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy begins

The new rules prohibited discrimination and harassment of closeted members of the armed forces.

WA government open to banning protesting in vicinity of places of worship

Would banning protests within 150m of places of worship curb our right to protest?