Pose cast serve it ancient city style to Chromatica and it is categorically the queerest thing that’s ever existed
Stop the clocks, cut off the telephone, because the Pose cast are serving it ancient city style to Lady Gaga’s Chromatica in this incredible mash-up.
The blessed 95 second video is a supercut of Pose’s finest ballroom scenes, full of face, body, hair, dips and duck walks, set to “Babylon”, the denouement of Lady Gaga’s Chromatica.
Indeed, bodies are moving like a sculpture – namely those of Elektra Abundance, Candy Ferocity and Ricky Evangelista.
It’s a sort of full-circle moment. “Babylon” bears more than a slight resemblance to Madonna’s “Vogue”, itself an appropriation of the ballroom scene faithfully recreated by Pose.
https://twitter.com/hoIyrare/status/1272984245527613445
Twitter’s response to the Lady Gaga-Pose mash-up was naturally one of cool restraint.
mama this is ART
— ɢon dcs✨ (@gonzalodcs_) June 16, 2020
I’m GAGGIN ???❤️
— B. Hawk Snipes (THEY/THEM) (@BHawkSnipes) June 17, 2020
IM LOSING MY MINDDD
— phoebe ? (@sandraohsbrain) June 17, 2020
With one fan making this potentially world-changing suggestion.
IM LOSING MY MINDDD
— phoebe ? (@sandraohsbrain) June 17, 2020
That’s gossip.
‘Babylon’ Pose mash-up biggest Chromatica meme since… last week.
Lady Gaga released Chromatica on May 29, a pulsating, throbbing mess of ’90s house beats split into three movements, each announced by a melodramatic orchestral interlude.
Among the highlights is the chill-inducing transition from the “Chromatica II” interlude, to “911”, a techno-lite tribute to the singer’s own antipsychotic medication.
It’s 10 seconds of pure art, which has since been immortalised by fans in the medium of meme.
https://twitter.com/LiteralEnigma/status/1271258108799705089
https://twitter.com/marymaryskaf/status/1272588105057546242
https://twitter.com/portalescutai/status/1272657856475602947
https://twitter.com/ShirleyPussy/status/1272806327841099779
Elsewhere, Pose – like everything else good and pure in this world – has been derailed by coronavirus.
Filming on the third season has been paused, with co-creator Steven Canals admitting that social distancing regulations might force the show to ditch its iconic ballroom scenes, which can often require as many as 150 background actors.