01What happened
The story, straight
Las Culturistas podcast co-hosts Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers performed a campy rendition of t.A.T.u.'s 'All the Things She Said' at the fifth edition of their Culture Awards, which streamed on Bravo. The show, which bills itself as a variety show masquerading as a serious awards ceremony, also featured the duo performing the original Pokémon anime theme song with dancers dressed as trainers carrying props resembling in-game tall grass. Clips of the performances are circulating online, with the full show available on Peacock.
bowen yang and matt rogers hit the culture awards stage performing t.A.T.u.'s 'all the things she said' — fully camp, fully committed. the bravo-streamed show also had them doing the pokémon anime theme with dancers dressed as trainers and props from the games. clips are already everywhere online.
02Spread timeline
Where it actually started
03Source receipts
Every claim, linked
04What's solid, what isn't
What's solid and what isn't
- Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers hosted the fifth Las Culturistas Culture Awards, streamed on Bravo.
- The duo performed t.A.T.u.'s 'All the Things She Said' on stage.
- They also performed the original Pokémon anime theme song with costumed dancers.
- The full show is available on Peacock.
- The exact airdate or whether additional performances will surface in coming days.
- Online clips from the ceremony continue to circulate; more performances may gain traction.
05Why it matters
The editorial take
The Las Culturistas Culture Awards has become a notable stop on the internet-culture-as-entertainment circuit, blending meme literacy, queer camp, and nostalgia into a format that draws real talent and real viewership. The t.A.T.u. performance in particular taps into ongoing conversations about the Russian duo's complicated legacy and how queer internet culture has reclaimed their music.
the culture awards keep proving that the internet-to-mainstream pipeline is real. a niche podcast's variety show on bravo is now the kind of place where t.A.T.u. and pokémon themes coexist without anyone blinking. the format works because it treats online culture with the same production value as anything else on tv.
