Eye On Horror

Talking Titans: A Queen is Crowned

iHorror

Correia, Waylon, and Lindsey discuss the reunion and finale of the Boulet Brothers Dragula Titans Season Two!! Join us as we recap the dramatic reunion episode and, dare we say, anticlimactic finale?? It's the last episode of our Talking Titans miniseries!


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Jonathan Correia:

Minosode! Minisode Finale!

Lindsey:

For the last time!

Jonathan Correia:

Welcome to Eye On Horror Talking Titans, the minisode series, where we sit down and we talk about the Boulet Brothers Dragula. This season is Titans, season two on shudder, spoilers ahead. We haven't really been giving those warnings at all, but it's recap before we get into it, though. Let me introduce my co host today. We have Mr. Waylon Jordan. How are you today?

Waylon Jordan:

I'm great. Having a blast. Ready to just shade the hell out of all of this. I'm just saying,

Jonathan Correia:

let's do this. Before we get shady. Let's bring in our other other hosts, sir. Lindsey Gant, how are you today?

Lindsey:

Doing great. I am marking our timeline down to zero incidences since the last time the Boulets messed up a finale of some sort.

Jonathan Correia:

It's not a dragula season without at least one episode being delayed, but like an hour and a half delay on the finale. Oh, that one hurt quite a bit. But before we get into things, let's do a quick recap of the last two episodes. Episode Nine last week, we saw the Last Supper reunion, where they bring back all but the two disqualified cast members back to serve looks and talk about their experiences. Some people came away with a very positive attitude, and some did not, and some left early. It was revealed to the remaining cast members that a side game, the hellbound showdown was being performed every week between the challenges, and so we got to witness our final hellbound showdown, which was a three way Lip Sync Battle to Time to Die by the Boulets. Because, of course, got to plug that LP between Jaharia, Cynthia Doll, and Sigourney Beaver, with the winner being Jaharia, adding her as the fourth finalist to go up against Abhora, Evah Destruction and JayKay in the finale. Now last night, after an hour and a half delay, we finally got to watch the finale to Titans season two, where we saw the four of them go at it. The theme this year was the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and they had to put their own unique spins on those four. After a very long wait, we finally see the winner, Evah Destruction winning the second crown of Dragula Titans. That's our season. That was the grand finale. Let's get into that reunion, because, boy howdy, did a lot happen. And I'm not just talking about Priscilla and Abhora locking fingers and toes.

Waylon Jordan:

before we get into the really mess of it. Can I just say for fuck sake, Loris was the best thing ever. Like, I just loved that moment so much. Dracmorda, just turning around and looking at her like, the fuck are you even doing here?

Jonathan Correia:

Loris, famously not the biggest fan of on dragula. Loris is outside of Dragula, the TV show. Love. She's great. She wasn't in competition. She could just show up as she wanted. I think they had like a theme of like, Oh yeah, you know, it's your funeral dress up or whatever. And so she came in like, the most Loris look ever, and she was comfortable. She wasn't being judged. She was just there being herself, and I enjoyed the fuck out of her. It was a nice reminder of, like, these competitors, how they act, what they do on this show is does not encompass their entire work. It's just like they like they always say it's how it pertains in this series. And I've pretty much softened on everyone I had a strong opinion on at the beginning of the season, except for one person, maybe two.

Lindsey:

Oh, Dollya got it. I already forgot about her.

Waylon Jordan:

God, well, she made herself easy to forget, or at least easy for us to want to forget her by the end of this. And she was no better on the goddamn reunion show. I mean, here's your moment to be a human being for an hour. And she couldn't even manage that. She got what, 10 minutes in, and then said, Hey, I'm out. I mean,

Lindsey:

you know what? I'm kind of okay with that. She realized that she wasn't going to bring anything else to the table. She, like, was hearing that everybody had critiques of her, and why should she have to sit there and take it? You know, just for the sake of the show. I honestly, like, honestly, think that was a really great move for deciding to be like, I don't want to be here anymore. I'm just gonna leave. And that's kind of a thing I do in my own life.

Jonathan Correia:

I mean, honestly, in her defense, she did show up. She did, you know, do the thing where everyone got to shit on her. She was just like, All right, well, I'm making my case. And then she wasn't wrong. Like, what else do you need for me? You got what you needed for me. I don't need to be here. I think that was self preservation. I think that was really. Mature in some capacities. I think it was really mature over to go like, I don't need to be here. And this isn't healthy for me to just sit here and looking like an angry child, you know, because I'm just gonna sit here with stank face the whole time. So I'm gonna dip, you guys got what you need for me? All right, peace. And, you know, on some levels, that's very mature. On some levels, it's not at the end of the day, you know, I think that she was doing what she needed for her. And, you know, I think, I think that's respectable.

Lindsey:

She does have resting child face, petulant, petulant child.

Waylon Jordan:

But that was far from all of the drama for this episode. I mean, the reunion, they really showed out on the reunion in some ways. I mean, just, and I love that the Boulet Brothers were intentionally just kind of saying, Okay, now you two do it. Okay. Now you two confront one another, just like, let's get all this shit out of the air while we're here.

Lindsey:

My favorite part of these reunion shows are these fake commercial breaks that they have just to give it a moment of like, all right, this is a structured conversation. We have a structured thing. We're having a moment to talk. They say, Okay, we're gonna take a break now, and it's just a moment for everybody to kind of just like, whisper to the side and have a little bit drama between them.

Jonathan Correia:

It's like one commercial break where Evah was going off about, I think it was like, her and Sigourney's thing, and then also and Cynthia's just, like, "translucent." And it was just the funniest fucking thing. I think I rewound that like, five times, just translucent. It's like, bitch you have no idea what's going on, do you? like? I love Cynthia so much, and I'm so glad that that clip from her season is popping up more again, where Orkgotik was calling her a dumb bitch who thought Argentina was in Mexico. A cube is a circle. A cube is a square. Because there was that whole bit where BlackBerry was calling her out and being like so you're so you got pissed at me for not following a plan I didn't know about. She's like, Yeah, and you sabotage me running everything Yeah, and all this stuff, yeah, and you're mad about that, and, like all this, she's like, Yeah, basically just like calling her out hard. And Cynthia was like, yeah. And Jaharia loses it. And, and the editors did her dirty because they played like a dial up tone as she was saying they're going, yeah, yeah, just like blank faced. But she's such a sweetheart. How could you he's not so lover?

Waylon Jordan:

You know, I will say for her. I'm not sure I wouldn't have gone with her instead of Jaharia out of the final hellbound showdown.

Lindsey:

No, she killed it.

Waylon Jordan:

She was out there, she was working her ass off, and I'm not sure that Jaharia had it the way that she had in that final one. I mean, you know, she didn't stand in the middle of the stage and just lip sync and point at people. I mean, that was a choice.

Lindsey:

But who would do that? Who would do that if you had your one last chance to make it to the finale. Who would do that?

Jonathan Correia:

So actually, before we get into the Hellbound Showdown about because I think it leads into it a bit, let's talk about this, the beaver in the room. Let's talk about Sigourney. Let's...

Waylon Jordan:

beaver in the room...

Jonathan Correia:

and her confrontation with Evah. I don't know if it went as if she planned. Because I do remember, when we were watching episode eight, I turned to Lindsey, I was like, Oh God, Sigourney is going to come back for the top four, because it's like a shoe in. But then there's that reminder that it's, you know, it's, it's a showdown. Just because she won one doesn't mean she's going to win the rest of it. She's going against two very strong competitors, but her whole argument for Evah to keep her was for good competition, and that helped that last hellbound showdown was a good example of to the contrary. How do you guys feel that her and Sigourney handled the confrontation at the reunion between the two, airing out the grievances, I should actually say

Waylon Jordan:

I don't know if it can be a confrontation if neither one of them are actually listening to one another. First of all, and Eva might have been trying to listen, but Sigourney was not trying to listen at all. I mean, she was just sitting there repeating the same things over and over and over again, while also saying that she hadn't said certain things, even though they had just played a video of her saying the things that she said she hadn't said and I, you know, I, she just seemed to be talking in a circle, and Evah was trying to talk at her or to her. I still not, still not sure on that, but yeah, I'm not sure that they got anywhere, and certainly not that they're going to be hanging out anytime soon. Who was it? JayKay, in the finale, who said they were going to Boca this weekend, you know? I mean, just joking, but you know, I don't think any plans to hang out are going to happen anytime soon after that blow up.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, it certainly was a lot. And I mean, JayKay, definitely jumped in. And I...Didn't diffuse at all, if anything, just continued to attack on Sigourney. So there's definitely a bit of a gang up. But she also, I don't know, with these groups, there's an ask for a lot of vulnerability between the cast members. And I feel like the ones that were the least vulnerable were the ones that everyone kind of reacted negatively towards, thinking Sigourney and Dollya both. They, they both. You know, even though one was more outwards in like going on the offensive against people, I feel like putting up those type of defensive walls was might, might be what they need to protect themselves and to keep themselves healthy. But I don't know if the other competitors saw that, so definitely. You know, it felt a little ganging up, but I mean, she wasn't backing down again. I see the side where that's commendable. I see the side where that seems like a jerk. Move either way, any statements about there be her being better competition than others. Went out the door during that lip sync challenge. These people were put out there to fight for their lives and to fight to get into this finale. And Sigourney stood there serving. I'll admit she served. I think that's great. It's not a bad performance. But in the context of this competition, which is, what are you willing to do to be in the final spot for the finale, to just stand there while everyone else is going ham is not enough, and was not meeting the challenge

Lindsey:

especially since she brought the drama she's experiencing into that competition, like her big stick was lighting her finger on fire and then flipping off the rest of the queens, like, at that point, you're just bringing in, like the anger that you have, in frustration for what's happening, but not actually doing like the performance for performance sake, like you're just, that's kind of just more for TV. I thought, I actually thought that's mostly been what she's been doing, is just having this ego for something that absolutely, I mean, it's earned, for sure. But in terms of this competition, this this show, specifically, I just haven't seen her be up to par with what needs to happen in order to actually take the crown home. Yeah, and if that's all she's doing, it's just like, focusing on her ego, focusing on, like, trying to get back at people who had said bad things about her. You're just not gonna get further in this competition. That's not gonna it's not going to it's not going to pan out for you in the way you think it's going to at this point, especially when everybody else, or at least like those two on the stage with her, at that point we're bringing it, their all trying to do everything they can to get into that last stage and have one last chance to get to the finale. But just seemed like at that point that wasn't her priority. Her priority was getting back at people who said bad things better.

Jonathan Correia:

Which I love, the lighting the finger on fire. And I've said this before about her stuff. When she does incorporate something different, I love it. It's just never enough. It's never a big thing. So like, if a big part of her performance to Time To Die, would have been a fuck you to the rest of the cast, own that go up and down the stage, get up on people's faces, lip syncing and, like, doing moves around them, flipping them off, and then ultimately, let your finger tips, your middle finger on fire and flip everyone. That would have been a great finale, if that was, like, great finale a part of the performance, but it wasn't. Meanwhile, like, Cynthia is just fucking flossing all over the stage, pour blood all over herself, and Jaharia is twerking her ass off. I mean, it's

Lindsey:

even like, the biggest Sigourney fan, like, I don't understand, like, how they could look at that and be like, No, Sigourney should win this. You should be back in the competition. Like, I don't know. I feel like people are, at that point, are just being bit closed minded.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah.

Waylon Jordan:

I mean, if you're, if you are going to have the ego, like Lindsey said, and if you are going to say all of these things, and if you are going to, you know, put yourself up and say, Don't you want real competition in this finale and everything, then you need to be able to prove that you can bring real competition. And I don't know if, in that moment she had just, maybe she had given up a little bit. Maybe she was beaten down over it. That's possible, too, you know, in a moment like that, who knows what's going on. But I think that really, I mean, it was all talk no game when it came, especially down to that last part before, you know, they decided who was going to go. And you know, they weren't the only ones to bring so much drama in the middle of this thing. But like, it was such a focus, I don't know it made for good television for five minutes, but I'm not sure that there was any kind of payoff for it.

Lindsey:

I love disasterina In the reunion. Thought she was a lot of fun. She kind of almost was antagonizing some people, though, in a way that maybe I didn't really expect from her. I think she came back to Priscilla a couple times

Jonathan Correia:

she did, but it was in jest.

Lindsey:

Yeah, exactly. She was being funny about it.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, there was that. There was that whole moment where she was just basically like, and you wouldn't make you don't work hard enough, you dirty hag or something like that. Priscilla. You see Priscilla, just feel like, what me like, it seems like one of those things, like when you're in a in a meeting, and like one of your friends is like dazed off and like glassy eyed, and then you just say something to put them on the spot, and they're just, what, what? Oh no, fuck you too. You know, that's what it felt like. I just love that one part where Sigourney turned to Priscilla and was like, I thought you were gonna like, I thought you were gonna have be behind me. Like, have my back. She's like, girl, I've been behind you this whole time. And I was sitting there going, like, physically because, yes, I don't know if it was the edit, but like, girl, you didn't say shit while she was while she was getting attacked by Evah and everyone else. So we have our final four right? Jaharia, Evah Destruction, JayKay and Abhora, and they were giving a month to create their own takes on the four horsemen of the apocalypse for the finale. Now this is different from the usual, because usually it's three looks

based on the tenets of Dragula:

filth, glamor and horror. I was hoping that people would take advantage of that and still hold those tenants in there. But again, I'm I didn't see I didn't see much filth. What did you guys think of the finale looks?

Lindsey:

I thought it was a really good decision to do the four horsemen, because they kind of inherently bring in the tenants of dragula. So you have pestilence, which is definitely should be more filthy. You know that kind of ties in together. You have death, which is definitely more of the horror and things you can always bring in more glam to stuff whenever you can. I thought that was a fun change of pace. Different topics there, and I had fun with what they chose to do for most of them. Other ones, I am questioning

Jonathan Correia:

my I wasn't against the theme. The thing that I think really, and it feels like it kind of tripped up most of the finalists, is a sheer number of looks they had to do. They had to do four, rather than the historical three. And I think that got into some people's heads, except for one, there was one person who seemed like they were prepared for something like that and had a consistency throughout all their things.

Lindsey:

You would think that with so many different looks that they had to come up with, that you wouldn't have Abhora who did somehow went over the top for all of them, somehow she did too much for having to with too many looks like she was. I was very impressed with like what she was wanting to do. I loved the pale night or the the horse coming out, the horse of death. I love that the whole look at the end. It was just very depressing seeing every every single moment when it fell apart and something just broke, and her look of sadness and desperation there at the end. But I hope that maybe that was maybe a choice on the editors, on They focus a bit more on that kind of stuff and having it be bad the whole time. But I don't know. I'm not sure, but I liked what she was trying to do, at least.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, Abhora, I felt regressed a bit, where she Icarus herself and flew too close to the high concept sun. She had so many props, she had so many bits in the thing. She had so many tech stuff, and it just opened the door for malfunctions. Every single one of her looks had some form of a malfunction, except for maybe the first one, which was pestilence. I thought they were all fantastic. And if they had worked, she could have easily been, like, a number two spot, but, or like, right on the ass of the winner, but, yeah, unfortunately, those malfunctions were major.

Lindsey:

But hey, you can say that she bled for art

Jonathan Correia:

that was punk rock as fuck.

Waylon Jordan:

Y'all know how I felt about Abhora. We started off talking about Abhora at the beginning of this podcast season. And I don't know how I went from that to I was sitting and watching her perform, and at some point I was just like, oh God, Abhora. Yeah. No, not another one. Like. It was just like I felt so bad, and I just wanted to hug Abhora. This is after how I felt at the beginning of this season. I think we saw her do so much this season and bring just enough the whole season, going over the top, occasionally, doing the things that that she does so well. And we got to this, and God it, I was cringing every time something happened, like the arrow stopping short. I was like, oh, surely, it can't get worse than this. And then the horse came out, and she's bleeding and it's nearly tipping over. And I was just like, God, just one moment. I just wanted to have one good moment in this finale.

Jonathan Correia:

And then they revealed that her pestilence look also had a malfunction, which they didn't show in the initial performance. And it was just like, Oh no.

Lindsey:

What was the look that she had, where she had the good giant, like, helmet, like, almost like fox head.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, war,

Lindsey:

war. I thought that was beautiful. Honestly, probably one favorite. Looks of the night. So she did have something there where, if she had stuck with that level and quality throughout all four of them, I think she could have gotten through with it. It was just something I just did not expect from her, in a way that I really appreciated and wanted to see more of.

Jonathan Correia:

But that was the first malfunction they showed. They showed her sword break in half. And then so she started doing she immediately started

Lindsey:

doing other stuff, so she was able to go with it. And then she threw the sword away, and she kept going. So she could have made that part of the like, we know that wasn't intentional, but she kept going with the performance, and kind of killed it with movements afterwards.

Waylon Jordan:

Yeah, she did what a good performer does when something goes wrong, you just keep going. You find a way to make it work. And again, just so impressed. I felt so bad. Yeah, I really wish it had worked out better.

Lindsey:

Yeah, and also that beard, oh yeah, what a great beard.

Jonathan Correia:

How did we forget to mention she just shows up and has a fucking full beard. I mean, gone for a month, but like beard?

Waylon Jordan:

Yeah, Abhora the kind of person that you just don't think can actually grow a beard, like it, like maybe it just doesn't grow. You know, she's always so clean shaven. But, yeah, that was, that was something that was really

Lindsey:

something a lot of assumptions about her, and she's just throwing those to the window.

Jonathan Correia:

It was great. I yeah, I'm so happy for everything that she's done. Into this season, we've seen some amazing art. We've seen her really go for it, really grow. And I think, you know, she didn't get the crown, but she definitely, like, showed some amazing art and improvement. So yeah,

Lindsey:

what do we think about JayKay?

Unknown:

I almost have to agree with what the Boulet Brothers said, it just felt like another bodysuit with some paint. And I mean it, she again, had so much potential up there, and she had good concepts, but on her end, she didn't do enough with them. You know, it was like she was down the opposite end. I, you know, I did love. Was it famine or pestilence? That the apple that was, that was really cool, and I really liked that. But other than that, it just she didn't seem like, I don't know if four was too much for her or what, but it did seem like she phoned it in a little bit.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, I don't know if it was phoning it in, but it did feel a bit of a regression to a kind of incompleteness that we saw on her original season, and that that hurt a lot, because I was, I was going into this finale going, it's JayKay versus Evah with Abhora being lined up for an upset. Like, I like, it's anyone's game. And by the second look, I it was pretty clear who was going to be the winner, but with that first look, it was very clear that it wasn't JayKay, and it was because she went out there and her back was completely exposed, that zipper was wide the fuck open. And if your look is pretty much a bodysuit, and that bodysuit isn't holding together, it's in the context of this competition in the finale, it's inexcusable.

Lindsey:

I was so confused by that first look. I'm still thinking about it, and I don't know what the hell it was like she was dragging something with her. She laid on top of it for a moment, like it was just, like, I don't know, like, bring the filth to the pestilence. One, like, that's what it's there for. There was, like, no filth. They could have had some Gore liquid of some sort, pus, anything to add to the look. That was really just like a bodysuit with like a sheet, yeah.

Waylon Jordan:

What's your when you're carrying around something that looks like egg sacks or something like, break that open, let let something nasty run out of it.

Lindsey:

It would have been great, yeah

Jonathan Correia:

it would have been great if it was filled with, like, water balloons or something so that when she plopped on it, it suddenly just started seeping out, or something nasty. You know, I think I've said it to like eight different people this season, where's my filth? Where's my blasphemy, where's my fucked upness? Because season one, we had Melissa Befierce use rosary beads as anal beads, and I we haven't hit anything like that. We've hit some stuff that got close to it, but like this finale, there was a lot of that. Not there. Now, Jaharia had some really strong looks in this. What was it? Was it her war with the with the gold puking.

Lindsey:

Yes, that was, that was cool.

Waylon Jordan:

Yeah, I really like that. It's something like a cross between vomit and a beard, I don't know, but it was growing out of her mouth, and I loved it. I'm not sure her covid pestilence thing entirely worked, but it was the only thing that we saw from pretty much anyone that was like a total coverage outfit

Lindsey:

it's also a little goopy.

Waylon Jordan:

Yes, it was little goopy. Yes, I'm not sure that it said covid either. You know, if she hadn't told us that's what it was, then I'm not sure that we would have gotten it.

Lindsey:

Yeah, like trash monster, garbage sludge or something.

Jonathan Correia:

One, yeah, she was definitely, like the biggest faceless, ugly doll out there, you know. And then, of course, we have the Crown winner, Evah who I think

Lindsey:

Miss Evah Destruction

Jonathan Correia:

Yes, Miss Evah Destruction, who I think was the most consistent and detailed of the finale of the finalists. Of course, I'm going to say again, wish there was more filth, but everything was detailed. Everything was in place. The concept was there. You when she came out, you knew exactly what she was. And she did a few surprising bits. I thought the death and having her like she's floating, bravo.

Lindsey:

so cool. Just goes into the boat.

Jonathan Correia:

It was a simple technique, and it worked.

Waylon Jordan:

It worked. I'm sorry, but her war Look, all I could think was mother of pinhead. I just like, that's what popped into my head when I saw her spin around and all those daggers and everything went flying around her. I was like, Yes, this. I would wear this like, somebody, give me one. Give me one. I want to wear this out like this is how much space I want around me at all times,

Lindsey:

Evah made a couple Critical Role references throughout the show. So I now understand Eva is just a total nerd, and I totally understand her looks. Now be able to pull in, like some of the fantasy, the nerd, that kind of culture into stuff, and I love it even more so for that purpose

Jonathan Correia:

I was and I turned to Lindsey, and I just went, what mid 2000s Cap Com video game? Did this character just pop out of because she looked like something straight out of like Devil May Cry, or Bayonetta, something like that look. She looked like a mini boss, and I was here for it. But she she had the again. It was the most consistent. She had the most details. It was hers, to be honest. By the time the second looks came, it was, it was just, this is Evah's she's got it. And you know what she was

Lindsey:

the entire season, she was just completely on point, like there was no thought whatsoever that she would not go to the next round.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, I think one of the things that was so hard and difficult about this finale is this was an exhausting season. This was a very high energy, high drama, high you're leaving every episode going, what the fuck just happened for the last hour? And I don't know if it was because of certain personalities weren't in the finale. Certain things were that like it just kind of felt like all the energy in the room just kind of left after the reunion, and it was just which is, which is fine, because it's like, All right, let's celebrate these people's arts. But it was definitely, I don't know, dude, there was it didn't the tension, wasn't I? For me, I didn't feel it there. And I think I wonder if it was just because we just spent the last fucking month and a half, just kind of like being put through the wringer as audience members with them, and then we're here, and it's like, all right, everyone's here, and everyone really likes each other, and everyone's real stoked to be here, and like, everyone seems really confident, and there's, there's no drama, okay, Let's just go right into the competition. And it's always great seeing full as, like, more floor shows and stuff, but like, there was no suspense, you know, in basically going, like, by the second look, going, it's Evah's, you know, we weren't sitting on the edge of our seats.

Lindsey:

I will say the crowning was amazing. I love that little sequence that was incredible. So at least leading up to that point, it was fun watching performances, hearing what the Boulets had, Boulets had to say, and then going on to the crowning, which we actually had a full crowning this time, first time we saw Victoria in a crown as well.

Jonathan Correia:

Yeah, thank God it wasn't just a picture. So that was Boulet Brothers, Dragula Titans, season two. How excited are you guys to see some new blood? By the time I get to the end of Titans, I'm like, All right, I need some new people. I need some fresh blood in here.

Waylon Jordan:

I think after you you watch a season of heavy hitters, but people that you've already seen before, you just, yeah, that craving is really there. Show me something different. Show me something new. Show me someone who has new ideas or a new way of doing this. And yeah, I think, I think that's just natural at this point. And I'm definitely interested to see who they bring in next.

Lindsey:

I'm definitely looking forward to seeing new people and seeing who can make the ranks of the next Titans whenever we get that one too.

Jonathan Correia:

Now, the Boulets hinted at some other folks that they might want to bring back from one of those early seasons, either in the main competition show or Titans. who is someone who has not been on Titans that you guys would want to see either come back for the next season or the next season of Titans.

Lindsey:

Well, we already talked about Koco before, but I think would love to see Koco again, and I think that she would have what it takes to be a Titan, and hopefully she can get a chance to actually perform on a future Titan show.

Jonathan Correia:

I mean, I just because I reference her all the time. I know it's a little cheating, because she was on titan season one, but Melissa Befierce, I would love to see her in a competition. I think it would be a bit rude to put her in like the main but having her back in some way, I think would be awesome. Another one I would love to see, even if it's just kind of like an update. Is Louisiana Purchase from season three.

Lindsey:

I liked her.

Jonathan Correia:

Oh, she was, she was amazing. I would love to see like, what she's been doing, how her art has evolved.

Lindsey:

Somebody else I loved that was in Resurrection, is Kendra Onyx. I need to get super far in Resurrection. But I mean giving her the chance she was always she was fun to watch, for sure, totally and also from Season Five, Orkgotik,

Jonathan Correia:

I would love to see Orkgotik come back.

Lindsey:

I don't know about this guy. I don't know. I don't know. No idea what the definitely grew on me throughout the entire season. Very fun, very interesting drag. Would love to see that again, but yeah, that was a, that was a great season. I actually had a lot of fun. Like it was, it was kind of crazy. This is a, there's a lot of people on it, and I loved most of them, and people that I didn't love, like they brought good TV. So there's that

Jonathan Correia:

everyone put on some amazing, unique and different art that's not being seen anywhere else. And to put yourself in front of a bunch of cameras, and to put your not just your art, but yourself on display like that is so commendable and major. So really, I think everyone just absolutely killed it. And yeah, I had a lot of fun. So yeah, you guys want to do this again next season?

Lindsey:

Well, you guys tell us, the audience, you tell us, do you want to hear more about this? Not just for Titans. Maybe we'll come back for the next actual Dragula this season. Since we've only done podcast for Titans before, maybe we can go back in to the new season.

Jonathan Correia:

We'll see. But until then, as always, our artwork is by Chris Fisher, so go check him out. Our theme music is by Restless Spirits. So restless spirits, go check them out. You can find us at Eye On Horror on the social medias, or at ihorror.com the website we call home. Waylon. Where can we find you?

Waylon Jordan:

Go check me out on Facebook. W Dale Jordan, author, you can also find me at W Dale Jordan author dot com, and I'm on Instagram at just Waylon Jordan.

Jonathan Correia:

awesome. You find myself in Lindsey on the Eye On Horror socials. So until next time, thank you all for listening to us bitch and moan and giggle, and this is always a lot of fun and worth the work. So thank you again. Thank you for listening and talking Titans. I'm Jonathan Correia,

Lindsey:

I'm Lindsey

Waylon Jordan:

and I'm Waylon,

Jonathan Correia:

and keep on Talking Titans.

Lindsey:

Titans, we are talking titans! yeah!

Jonathan Correia:

It was a great finale.

Waylon Jordan:

Do you think those were sigourney's ashes in that urn?

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