After all, Craig and Nancy may have been around for over 20 years, but they only spent a couple years in Salem and have lived most of their relationship off-screen. In fact, their issue is even more than simply splitting up a favorite couple. When your sentence begins with “I have nothing against gay” you know what’s coming… įor many, though, it goes a little deeper. “When your sentence begins with ‘I have nothing against gay,’ you know what’s coming,” he tweeted in response to a fan. That idea, though, is one he hasn’t hesitated to speak out against. Feelings run strong about this story, and viewers have had no problem coming for Carlivati for what they see as him forcing a subject only he cares about. Serving as a catalyst to bring another couple back together may not, however, appease some angry fans. When Craig wants Chloe to meet his new paramour, she asks Brady to come, so you know it becomes sort of de facto double date.” Chloe is not really ready to move into something romantic, but we do see her leaning more and more on Brady. “We will use that story to bring Chloe and Brady closer. “Craig and Nancy’s marriage is crumbling, and Craig is falling for someone else,” he told Soap Opera Digest. More: EJ is set to have a “killer” reunionįor one thing, show headwriter Ron Carlivati recently spoke to Soap Opera Digest and teased that Craig and Nancy’s story will end up being a springboard for another couple. Days of Our Lives‘ Craig has admitted to Chloe that he’s not just cheating on Nancy, but with another man! And the fallout is sure to be a dramatic rollercoaster ride. There have been rumblings leading up to this moment for a few days, and now the moment has finally come. This is down to Kylie’s skilled soundbite responses to Molly’s questions, their obvious rapport, and the right choice of video clips to illustrate and add colour and movement to the static interview setting.Viewers are already drawing their lines in the sand. It’s amazing how much this clip covers in under one minute. Camp feathers, lovely boy dancers – all those ingredients make the perfect recipe.' Millie told The Star Observer in 2010 that Kylie ‘knows what to give the gay people. Despite the poor quality of the footage, it’s easy to see why it was included – that a drag queen has a full-time gig impersonating her shows the extent of Kylie's gay male following. The clip finishes with home video footage of Melbourne-based drag queen Millie Minogue miming to a recording of ‘Shocked’, also from Rhythm of Love. Singer songwriter Rufus Wainwright summed it up nicely: 'She is the gay shorthand for joy'. She says her gay fans have been with her through thick and thin, although she was never specifically marketed to that audience when she was starting out. Her performances at the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Party in 1994, 19 are legendary.
Kylie is held in the highest esteem and adored by her gay male fans.
I saw a new way to express my point of view creatively.' I’d bought some clothes on King's Road for the video. She told the Sydney Morning Herald in 2011 'I wasn’t in charge but I had a voice. It is interesting to note that Kylie credits the making of this career-changing video clip as the first time she 'felt part of the creative process'. It is also a key song for her gay audience and, in a sign of devotion, London’s G-A-Y club plays it every Saturday night at 12:30 am. As the raunchy dancing and costumes in the video illustrate, ‘BTDYK’ as it’s known by hardcore Kyliephiles, is credited with reinventing Kylie’s image from girl-next-door to sex symbol.
The song was written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman and was released on her third studio album Rhythm of Love (1990). An excerpt of the iconic music video, directed by Paul Goldman, features. In this short clip from Molly Presents the Divas (2006) Molly Meldrum refers to Kylie’s hit ‘Better the Devil You Know’ (1990) as a ‘Kylie anthem‘. Kylie’s passionately dedicated gay fans have been a key part of her success.