Where Is Hunter From 'Were Here' on HBO Now? Plus, Details on the Show

Hunter Said 'We're Here' on HBO Was a Life-Changing Experience
By Shannon RaphaelApr. 23 2020, Updated 5:09 p.m. ET
If you're a fan of RuPaul's Drag Race, otherwise you assume that Shangela Laquifa Wadley was once robbed on All-Stars 3, that Bob the Drag Queen is the most underrated winner of all time, or that Eureka O'Hara deserved extra reward after coming again from her knee harm, then you'll be able to certainly need to tune in to We're Here on HBO.
The show is debuting on the top class cable platform on April 23, and the three RPDR alums are traveling around small cities to search out other people to offer drag makeovers to.
From a contestant who is considering checking out drag as an artistic outlet, to a girl who struggled to just accept her queer daughter in years past, the show is set to convey out the viewers' emotions.
One one who can be featured on the show is Hunter, whose tale will probably be shown on the debut episode of the sequence. Where is Hunter from We're Here now? Find out what the makeover topic had to say about being on the show, and to determine extra about where to watch it.
Where is Hunter from 'We're Here' now?
While the three RPDR alums are going to be present throughout the show, for each and every makeover recipient, one among the queens will function the main mentor.
For Hunter's episode, Shangela will supply pointers, emotional toughen, and advice on what it takes to slay a drag show. Shangela will head to Harrisburg, Penn., to give Hunter the drag makeover of an entire life.
While we didn't get a lot details about who Hunter is based totally on the show's trailer, the We're Here Episode 1 makeover topic posted about being part of the show on Instagram.
On April 23, Hunter expressed gratitude for buying to be on the show, and referred to it as a life-changing enjoy.
"I truly cannot believe the day is finally here. This experience changed my life in ways that I can’t even explain. When I agreed to be a part of this, I had no idea what it actually would entail. But the things that I learned about my family, my community and myself through the whole process was priceless," Hunter wrote in the publish's caption. "This show is such a triumph of love and it goes to show that we are all a lot more similar than we think."
"I am so lucky to be a part of the LGBTQ community and I’ve never been more proud to be gay in my entire life. I'm so excited for everyone to meet my beautiful family and to also meet the people who worked on this show who I now also consider my family, especially my mother/mentor Shangela," Hunter persisted.
"Her and I worked our a---s off together and she taught me so many things in such a short amount of time," Hunter concluded. "She ignited such a fire in me and I will never be able to thank her enough for that. So... with all that being said... BUCKLE UP! And get ready because after all this time... WE'RE HERE!!"
As a ways as Hunter's lifestyles beyond the show, an Instagram put up with a full face of makeup on means that Hunter can have realized a thing or two since seeing Shangela.
While Hunter certainly had a good revel in on We're Here, viewers gets to know extra when the series debuts.
You can observe Hunter on Instagram here.
Where can you watch 'We're Here'?
The first season of the sequence will include six episodes, with each and every focusing on a new mentee. Though you generally want to have a subscription to HBO to watch its presentations, the first episode of the show will move free of charge on YouTube starting at Nine p.m. on April 23. It can even air on HBO at the same time.
New episodes air on Thursdays at Nine p.m.
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