Brian Tyree Henry walked the runway on RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars this month. His thank-you note afterward raised a question worth asking: how many celebrities call themselves fans of a show they’re guesting on and actually mean it?
Henry posted on Instagram this week with a ranked list of his four favorite things about June 2026. Juneteenth topped the list, fresh off its June 19 observance. Pride came in at number two. The New York Knicks landed at three. And RuPaul‘s Drag Race All Stars rounded things out at four.
Put that list together and a picture starts to form.
“There’s a few many things that deserve love and celebration this month,” Henry wrote in the caption. He closed with a direct note to RuPaul: “Big love to Ru and this entire family for making a fan feel right at home on the runway.”
That word “fan” is doing a lot of work here. Henry wasn’t doing a press run or crossing off an obligation. He was describing himself as someone who belongs in that world. That’s a different kind of statement.
Henry is best known for his work on FX’s Atlanta, a critically acclaimed series that reshaped what prestige TV could look like. He’s also appeared in HBO’s Lovecraft Country and NBC’s This Is Us. Across all of it, he’s built a reputation for performances that hit hard and feel real. A Drag Race guest spot might look like a detour from that path. His post suggests it’s more of a natural stop.
Drag Race All Stars is the franchise’s most competitive format, pulling together returning contestants for a second shot at the crown. It’s also known for booking guest judges and celebrity visitors who actually engage with the contestants rather than sleepwalk through the taping. A guest with Henry’s range and emotional instinct fits that mold.
Most celebrity appearances on the show come with polished statements attached. Henry’s post reads nothing like that. It’s a personal list, written the way someone might text a friend after a good weekend.
His framing seems intentional. He placed the Drag Race appearance alongside Juneteenth and Pride. Both carry real cultural weight right now. Juneteenth was just three days ago. Pride Month still has weeks to run. Henry isn’t plugging a TV appearance. He’s placing it inside a moment that clearly means something to him.
Drag Race devotees have strong opinions about celebrity guests. They tend to know when someone shows up out of obligation and when someone shows up because they actually want to be there. Henry’s message reads like the latter.
Will he return to the runway? That’s an open question. Will Ru hold the door for him next season? That’s what people will be wondering.
For now, Henry’s June is stacked. Juneteenth. Pride. The Knicks. The runway.
Some months just come together.
