
1 minute read
Santos condemns G.N. drag performance
Continued from Page 1 culture and the art of drag,” Santos told News 12. “I’m saying that there are some things that are appropriate and some things that are not and I just don’t believe drag should be in school.”
Great Neck Board of Education
Advertisement
President Rebecca Sassouni told Blank Slate Media that the student’s family was in attendance along with other students and their families during the performance. People recorded the performance, which briefly ended up on Santos’ social media.
“How that ends up being anything worth the attention of a Unit- ed States congressman and national media attention strains credulity,” Sassouni told Blank Slate Media.
Sassouni said the student performer had his parents’ consent and that the school district “supports all of our kids in the Great Neck Public Schools and their ability to perform, to be safe and to express themselves.”
She also said the “Coffee House” events will continue to go on.
Videos and photos surfaced in January of Santos allegedly dressed up in drag at a party in Brazil. Some who claimed they knew Santos in Brazil said it was the congressman depicted in videos and photos from the event, though Santos had somewhat denied the claims.
“The most recent obsession from the media claiming that I am a drag queen or “performed” as a drag queen is categorically false,” Santos tweeted earlier this year. “The media continues to make outrageous claims about my life while I am working to deliver results.”
But Santos later appeared to acknowledge that he had dressed in drag in Brazil while maintaining he was not a drag queen.
No, I was not a drag queen in Brazil, guys. I was young and I had fun at a festival. Sue me for having a life,” Santos previously said.