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This week, the queens take on a twist no one asked for: the Snatch Game of Love Island. Instead of the traditional panel format, the contestants are thrown into a dating-show setup that forces them to improvise in unfamiliar territory. On the runway, the category is 80s Ladies, and on the main stage, Ninni Coco takes the win. Kenya Pleaser and Mia Starr land in the bottom two, lip sync for their lives, and ultimately Mia Starr is asked to sashay away.
Joe and Lauri break down whether the twist was fair, whether the right queen won, and whether this version of Snatch Game set the cast up to fail.
––––––––––
THE BIG QUESTIONS
Did the right queen win?
Were the right queens in the bottom?
Did the right queen go home?
––––––––––
LAURI’S BIG TAKEAWAY
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
Why change Snatch Game?
Lauri argues that the Love Island twist was an unnecessary curveball that destabilized the contestants. Many queens clearly prepared for the traditional format, and shifting the structure mid-season created confusion, fear, and watered-down performances. Instead of elevating the challenge, the twist exposed insecurity and resulted in one of the weaker Snatch Games in recent memory.
––––––––––
JOE’S BIG TAKEAWAY
Preparation matters.
Snatch Game is a cornerstone of Drag Race. By Season 18, contestants should arrive ready with a fully realized character, structured jokes, and the confidence to commit. Joe questions how multiple queens appeared underprepared and why so many rely on vague or made-up characters rather than recognizable celebrities that give them stronger comedic anchors.
––––––––––
OTHER DISCUSSION POINTS
– The risk of abandoning the traditional Snatch Game format
––––––––––
NEXT WEEK
Join Joe and Lauri for more gut reactions and first impressions as Season 18 continues to unfold.
For extended discussions and deeper dives, check out Recap on Patreon and Rulaska Thoughts on the public feed.
Follow Joe on Instagram: @joebetance
See you next week.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Authentic Podcast Network3.9
571571 ratings
This week, the queens take on a twist no one asked for: the Snatch Game of Love Island. Instead of the traditional panel format, the contestants are thrown into a dating-show setup that forces them to improvise in unfamiliar territory. On the runway, the category is 80s Ladies, and on the main stage, Ninni Coco takes the win. Kenya Pleaser and Mia Starr land in the bottom two, lip sync for their lives, and ultimately Mia Starr is asked to sashay away.
Joe and Lauri break down whether the twist was fair, whether the right queen won, and whether this version of Snatch Game set the cast up to fail.
––––––––––
THE BIG QUESTIONS
Did the right queen win?
Were the right queens in the bottom?
Did the right queen go home?
––––––––––
LAURI’S BIG TAKEAWAY
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
Why change Snatch Game?
Lauri argues that the Love Island twist was an unnecessary curveball that destabilized the contestants. Many queens clearly prepared for the traditional format, and shifting the structure mid-season created confusion, fear, and watered-down performances. Instead of elevating the challenge, the twist exposed insecurity and resulted in one of the weaker Snatch Games in recent memory.
––––––––––
JOE’S BIG TAKEAWAY
Preparation matters.
Snatch Game is a cornerstone of Drag Race. By Season 18, contestants should arrive ready with a fully realized character, structured jokes, and the confidence to commit. Joe questions how multiple queens appeared underprepared and why so many rely on vague or made-up characters rather than recognizable celebrities that give them stronger comedic anchors.
––––––––––
OTHER DISCUSSION POINTS
– The risk of abandoning the traditional Snatch Game format
––––––––––
NEXT WEEK
Join Joe and Lauri for more gut reactions and first impressions as Season 18 continues to unfold.
For extended discussions and deeper dives, check out Recap on Patreon and Rulaska Thoughts on the public feed.
Follow Joe on Instagram: @joebetance
See you next week.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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