Dancing queen show review
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An over-priced, mediocre, hard-to-see, and uncomfortable-to-watch 3rd rate production that looked like a refugee from a 3 star cruise ship!.
Stream It or Skip It: ‘Dancing Queen’ on Netflix Marries Drag and Dance
Is there a reality TV genre that Netflix hasn’t tried in just 2018 alone?
Once known predominantly for its prestige scripted fare, the streaming giant has checked off boxes for makeover shows, cooking shows, home reno shows, and more. Now here comes Dancing Queen, a cable-style reality docu-series in the vein of Dance Moms with one tongue-popping twist: it stars Drag Race fan-favorite Alyssa Edwards.
DANCING QUEEN: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?
Opening Shot: A flag perched on the edge of the roof of a nondescript building on the edge of a nowhere road under a cloudless sky.
That interplay between earnest parents and the serious side of a fun-loving queen makes for TV that edges up to inspirational.
The flag’s red, white, and blue, but it’s not an American flag: it’s a BBQ flag. As more southern-fried images of traditional Texas roll through (a gun-shaped sign for the BBQ joint, cows grazing in a yellow-green pasture), we hear something unusual: a voice calling out a rat-a-tat dance count.
The Gist: The place: Mesquite, Texas.
The name: Alyssa Edwards. The legacy: RuPau