When MTV's Road Rules/Real World Challenge:
Battle of the Sexes 2 premieres this Monday night, it will
include more out lesbian and bisexual women than any reality
show on television ever has—more than any television show
of any kind, actually, except The
L Word.
The
show reunites 36 former Real World and Road Rules
contestants to compete in a series of tasks over a several-day
period for a large cash prize. Among the 18 female contestants,
"half are lesbians, half are bisexual, and there is maybe
one straight girl who is probably going to turn during the challenge,"
according to bisexual contestant Ruthie Alcaide in a video clip
on the show's official site.
That
might be overstating it a bit, but it certainly is
true that this show has an unusually high number of openly lesbian
and bisexual women: 5 out of 18, in fact. (If you count Veronica,
who had a threesome with Rachel Robinson and a male contestant
named Abe on 2003's Real World/Road Rules Challenge: The
Gauntlet, that's six.) Add in the two openly gay male contestants,
Nick and Shane, and you've got one of the gayest shows on television.
Not
only is the sheer number of queer women higher than anything
we've seen before, they are unusually racially diverse: only
two of the five are white women. Previously, the reality show
that held the title of the most queer female contestants was
Survivor: Vanuatu, which
debuted a few weeks ago with two white lesbian contestants.
Here's
a quick run-down on the five openly queer women on Battle
of the Sexes 2:
RUTHIE
ALCAIDE, 26, BISEXUAL
The openly bisexual Honolulu native, who is part-Hawaiian, Filipino,
and Samoan, is one of a set of triplets raised by foster parents;
she likes to surf, skydive, scuba dive, and parasail, but her
memorable debut on The Real World: Hawaii in 1999 portrayed
her primarily as a bisexual party girl who was temporarily kicked
off the show to enter rehab—an image that Ruthie has stated
was "very one-sided." Since then, Ruthie finished
her degree at Rutgers University and moved to L.A., where she
is currently working on a rap album; she also tours colleges
speaking to students about drug and alcohol awareness, diversity,
racism, and sexuality.
She
is currently single, and based on her performance on the first
Battle of the Sexes, is considered one of the strongest
female contenders to win Battle of the Sexes 2.
GENESIS
MOSS, 28, LESBIAN
Genesis grew up in Gulfport, Mississippi and made her debut
on MTV's The Real World: Boston in 1997. While on the
show, she became friends with a drag queen named Adam—a
friendship the editors depicted as a romantic relationship.
"Because Adam was a drag queen and he was my best friend,"
Genesis explained repeatedly after the show, "[the editors
falsely made it look like] I was having some sexual attraction
to him."
Genesis
was in a committed relationship with her girlfriend at the time,
but they broke up two years ago and she has been dating someone
new since then, a woman with whom she is planning a commitment
ceremony soon. She currently lives in California and works as
a graphic artist and a yoga instructor.
SOPHIA
PASQUIS, 24, LESBIAN
Haitian American New Yorker Sophia became the first openly gay
Road Rules contestant when she was cast on Road
Rules: The Quest in 2001. Although she was well-liked by
other contestants and viewers for her amiable personality and
problem-solving skills, she found the burden of representation
difficult at times. "If I had a problem with someone,"
she said in 2003 on a GLBT panel sponsored by Ohio State University,
"I had to ask myself, do I say something and be myself,
or do I let it go so as to not give people a bad impression
of black people or lesbians?"
Sophia
has spent the last few years since The Quest
speaking about these issues on college campuses. She currently
has a girlfriend with whom she's been living with for a year.
RACHEL
ROBINSON, 21, LESBIAN
Rachel was raised in New York City and Miami Beach, and dated
guys in high school, until she met and fell in love with Amy
in her sophomore year. Rachel
had not yet identified her sexual orientation when she applied
to be on Road Rules, nor was she out to her friends
about her relationship with Amy. When she stated on her RR
application that she had a girlfriend, friends thought she was
simply pretending to be gay to increase her chances of getting
on the show.
When
the show aired in 2002, however, and the truth came out, Robinson
initially "found myself justifying it, telling people 'I
don't know if this is my lifestyle forever, but for the moment,
I'm in love with a woman,'" according to an interview with
Miami's Express Gay News. Shortly after she finished
her stint on the show, however, Rachel came out as a lesbian
and now spends her time touring college campuses to talk about
coming out and co-anchoring a Miami radio talk show about gay
issues. Rachel is currently single.
ANEESA
FERREIRA, 23, LESBIAN
During her debut on The Real World: Chicago in 2002,
this self-identified "gay, black and Jewish" contestant
from Narbouth, Pennsylvania was known for walking around naked
(which she now regrets) and dating a series of women. According
to her bio on MTV's official Battle of the Sexes 2
site, Aneesa is "not currently dating anyone and is hoping
Ms. Right will find her. With four other lesbians on this show,
so she just might get her wish."
Real
World/Road Rules Challenge: The Battle of the Sexes 2 premieres
Monday, October 11 at 10pm EST/PST on MTV; visit the official
site for more information.