
But I’m a Cheerleader | Camp, Colour & Conversion Therapy
From Required Watching by Required Watching
June 1, 2026 · 7 min · Season 4 · Episode 12
About this episode
This episode explores the film 'But I’m a Cheerleader' and its use of camp and color as a critique of conversion therapy.
What happens when a film about conversion therapy is so aggressively colour-coded that the production design becomes the argument? In this episode, we break down But I’m a Cheerleader — Jamie Babbitt’s 1999 queer camp classic that weaponises pink, pastel, and Natasha Lyonne against the logic of forced identity correction. We talk about camp as a protest language (not just an aesthetic), why Megan’s arc is actually about permission rather than discovery, what RuPaul’s casting choice tells you about the film’s entire argument, and why in 2025 this isn’t a time capsule — it’s a warning dressed in sequins. In This Episode Camp as political language: what it actually means when a film weaponises its own artificiality Production design as critique: how the colour-coded sets work harder than any line of dialogue Megan’s real arc: not discovery, but permission — and why that distinction matters RuPaul as reformed straight coach: drag logic deployed in its most hostile possible context Why 1999’s radical lesbian love story with no tragedy lands differently in 2025 Film Mentioned But I’m a Cheerleader (1999) — dir. Jamie Babbitt Letterboxd page: @requiredwatching Subscribe & Connect…
People in this episode
Host: Required Watching
Topics covered
- conversion therapy
- camp aesthetics
- queer cinema
- production design
- identity
- political language
Keywords
- conversion therapy
- camp
- queer cinema
- production design
- identity correction
- Megan's arc
- RuPaul
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Jamie Babbitt
Books & works: But I’m a Cheerleader
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