Jiggly Caliente
Jiggly Caliente (born Paulo Arabejo; November 29, 1980 – April 27, 2025), professionally known as Bianca Castro-Arabejo, was a Filipino-American drag performer, actress, and television judge.[1][2] Born in San Pedro, Laguna, Philippines, she immigrated to the United States in 1991 and established her career in New York City's drag scene.[1] Caliente rose to national prominence as a contestant on the fourth season of RuPaul's Drag Race in 2012, where she earned the Miss Congeniality award, and returned for the sixth season of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars in 2021.[3] She portrayed the recurring character Veronica Ferocity in the FX drama series Pose from 2018 to 2021, depicting elements of New York ballroom culture.[4] In 2016, Caliente publicly identified as a transgender woman, and she later served as a judge on Drag Race Philippines for its first three seasons from 2022 to 2024.[5][6] Her death at age 44 resulted from complications following a leg amputation due to a severe infection.[7]Early Life and Background
Childhood and Family Origins
Bianca Castro, professionally known as Jiggly Caliente, was born on November 29, 1980, in San Pedro, Laguna, Philippines, to a Filipino family.[8][1] In 1991, at the age of 10, she immigrated to the United States with her mother and brother, settling in the Queens neighborhood of New York City.[1][9] Limited public details exist regarding her early family dynamics or specific childhood experiences prior to the move, though her Filipino heritage remained a foundational aspect of her identity.[8]Education and Formative Influences
Bianca Castro-Arabejo, known professionally as Jiggly Caliente, was born on November 29, 1980, in San Pedro, Laguna, Philippines, and immigrated to the United States with her mother and brother in 1991, settling in the Queens neighborhood of New York City.[1] Her early childhood reflected creative tendencies common among many queer youth, including fashioning blankets into makeshift dresses, which foreshadowed her later artistic pursuits.[8] Raised in an immigrant Filipino-American household, Caliente's formative years were shaped by the cultural transition from Philippine roots to urban New York life, fostering resilience amid familial and societal challenges. During her junior year of high school, Caliente came out as gay to her family, an experience she described as awkward and initially met with non-acceptance, marking a pivotal moment in her personal development. This period also sparked her interest in cartooning and comic book illustration, influencing her creative direction.[10] Following high school, she attended the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in New York to study illustration, drawn by her passion for comics, though she did not complete the program.[10] [11] These educational and early artistic exposures, combined with her emerging queer identity, laid the groundwork for her entry into drag as a form of self-expression and trans awakening.[11]Entry into Entertainment
Pre-Drag Experiences and Sex Work
Bianca Castro-Arabejo, professionally known as Jiggly Caliente, immigrated from San Pedro, Laguna, in the Philippines to Sunnyside, Queens, New York, at age 10, where she faced early challenges including bullying that led to her expulsion from first grade after stabbing a classmate with a pencil in self-defense.[12][13] These formative experiences contributed to a pattern of resilience amid societal rejection, particularly as a transgender woman navigating limited employment options.[14] Prior to beginning drag performances around 2004, Castro-Arabejo engaged in survival sex work, including escorting, due to barriers in securing stable jobs as a trans individual of color.[14] She has described this as a necessary response to economic pressures, stating, "It was something I had to experience and I’m never ashamed of it, never ashamed of what I had to go through to survive," emphasizing that "sometimes easy money is the way to go" amid political and societal exclusion.[14] While attending the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) to pursue fashion illustration for comic books, she supplemented income through such work, later clarifying in interviews that her escorting did not overlap with bar employment at venues like The Web but occurred concurrently in her early adulthood.[12] Castro-Arabejo remained candid about these experiences, rejecting slut-shaming and developing a one-woman show to address sex work's realities, asserting, "I’m very open about it because there is so much slut-shaming in our society… Why are we shaming something that we do with our bodies?"[12] Escorting proved financially superior to nascent entertainment pursuits, with Castro-Arabejo recounting resistance to friends Manila Luzon and Sahara Davenport's urging to abandon it for RuPaul's Drag Race in 2012, noting, "I make more money than either one of you bitches. I’m cool."[11] This period underscored the causal link between trans marginalization and reliance on informal economies for sustenance before her drag career gained traction.[14][12]Initial Drag Performances
Jiggly Caliente, born Bianca Castro, entered the New York City drag scene around 2003 by participating in an amateur competition at The Web nightclub to support a friend.[11] For her debut performance, she wore a simple outfit consisting of a red sweater and JNCO jeans while lip-syncing to Janet Jackson's "Doesn’t Really Matter," ultimately winning the contest despite describing the competition as featuring many less polished performers ("Ang daming chaka").[11] This initial success prompted Caliente to compete in additional pageants within the underground drag circuit, where performances were often marginalized and queens risked being removed from nightclub lineups on slow nights.[11] By approximately 2007–2008, she achieved prominence by dominating Barracuda's Star Search competition with a 32-week winning streak, establishing her reputation in New York's competitive bar scene.[11] Caliente later reflected that drag served as a pivotal "awakening" for her transgender identity, emerging from the raw, subversive roots of early 2000s queer nightlife before the mainstream commercialization spurred by reality television.[11] These formative experiences in Queens-based venues honed her performance style, blending humor, resilience, and cultural influences from her Filipino-American background.[15]Rise Through Drag Race
Participation in RuPaul's Drag Race Season 4
Jiggly Caliente was announced as one of the twelve contestants for the fourth season of RuPaul's Drag Race on November 13, 2011. The season, hosted by RuPaul and produced by World of Wonder, premiered on Logo TV on January 30, 2012, with the episode "RuPocalypse Now!".[16] Caliente, a drag performer based in Queens, New York, entered the werkroom alongside fellow competitors including Sharon Needles, Chad Michaels, and Latrice Royale, introducing herself with emphasis on her vivacious performance style derived from her stage name.[17] In the premiere, the queens participated in a mini-challenge involving a post-apocalyptic-themed photoshoot, followed by the main challenge to create couture looks from scavenged materials symbolizing a "ru-pocalypse" scenario. Caliente's participation highlighted her comedic timing and physical comedy, traits that became recurring elements in her run, though she did not advance to the top in early critiques.[18] The season's format required contestants to excel in challenges spanning runway presentations, acting, and group performances, with weekly eliminations determined by judges including RuPaul, Michelle Visage, Santino Rice, and rotating guest panelists. Caliente competed through seven episodes, navigating bottom placements without securing a maxi challenge victory.[17]On-Show Performance and Elimination
In the premiere episode of RuPaul's Drag Race season 4, aired January 30, 2012, Caliente participated in a post-apocalyptic-themed photoshoot challenge, where contestants posed with props evoking a ruined world.[19] Judges critiqued her for lacking control and precision in her movements, leading to a bottom-two placement against Alisa Summers.[19] The lip-sync was performed to Britney Spears' "Toxic," with Caliente's more frenetic energy declared superior, saving her while Summers was eliminated.[19] [20] Subsequent episodes saw Caliente in the bottom again during episode 2's "Drag on a Dime" challenge, requiring quick outfit transformations from thrift-store finds, where she lip-synced against LaShauwn Beyond to an unspecified track and advanced.[21] She avoided elimination until episode 6's "Drag Race Extravaganza" variety show, featuring comedy, dance, and singing segments, landing her in the bottom two versus Milan for a lip-sync to an unreported song, from which she emerged victorious.[22] Throughout her run, Caliente received no main challenge wins, with critiques often highlighting inconsistent polish in performances despite strong personality and runway presence, such as her entrance look featuring a lollipop prop.[23] [24] Her elimination occurred in episode 7, aired March 19, 2012, following the "Float Your Fanny" challenge involving boat-themed designs and water-based performances. Placed in the bottom two against Willam Belli, they lip-synced to Pam Tillis' "Mi Vida Loca (My Crazy Life)," a country track emphasizing narrative storytelling.[25] Caliente's more stationary interpretation failed to outshine Belli's dynamic energy, resulting in her elimination and an eighth-place finish overall.[25] [26] In Untucked sessions, Caliente displayed notable emotional vulnerability, including tearful outbursts that underscored interpersonal tensions but drew mixed viewer reactions for amplifying drama over competition focus.[23]Post-Drag Race Career
Music and Recording Output
Jiggly Caliente entered music production following her RuPaul's Drag Race appearance, releasing her debut single "Fckboi" on March 1, 2018, via her official YouTube channel and streaming platforms.[27] The track, characterized by electropop elements, marked her initial foray into solo recording output.[28] Eight days later, on March 9, 2018, Caliente issued her debut studio album T.H.O.T. Process, comprising 10 tracks blending pop rap and electropop genres.[29] Key singles from the album included "I Don't Give a F**k" featuring Sharon Needles, which received an official music video, and "Pretty Girl Anthem" featuring Peppermint.[30] Additional album cuts encompassed "All This Body" and holiday-themed songs such as "Ratchet Christmas" and "Deck the Halls".[31] The album's release aligned with Caliente's broader entertainment pursuits, with "All This Body" addressing body standards through its November 30, 2018, music video collaboration with Alaska and Ginger Minj.[32] No subsequent full-length albums followed, though Caliente maintained a presence on streaming services with these 2018 outputs comprising her primary discography.[33]Acting Roles in Television and Film
Caliente's acting career commenced with minor television appearances in the mid-2010s. In 2015, she portrayed a drag queen in the season two finale episode "St. Mark's" of the Comedy Central sitcom Broad City.[34] She followed this with a role in season one of TBS's Search Party in 2016, contributing to the series' ensemble of quirky characters amid its satirical mystery plot.[9] These early parts established her presence in comedic television, leveraging her drag persona for authentic portrayals of nightlife and subcultural figures. Her breakthrough in scripted television arrived with the FX drama Pose (2018–2019), where she secured a recurring role as Veronica Ferocity, a bold club personality involved in the 1980s and 1990s New York ballroom scene.[17] [7] Veronica appeared in key episodes of season one, including the sixth and eighth installments, and continued into season two, embodying the show's themes of resilience within LGBTQ+ communities facing the AIDS crisis.[35] The role drew from Caliente's lived experiences in drag culture, providing a layered performance that critics noted for its raw authenticity amid the series' Emmy-nominated production.[7] Transitioning to film, Caliente appeared as Gigi Sordide in the independent drama Milkwater (2020), a story exploring surrogacy, identity, and queer family dynamics in New York City. Her character contributed to the film's depiction of drag and nightlife elements, aligning with the narrative's focus on personal reinvention. She also had a supporting role in the comedy sequel Hurricane Bianca: From Russia with Hate (2018), playing a drag performer in the film's campy revenge plot centered on a teacher-turned-drag-queen confronting school adversaries.[36] These projects marked her expansion into feature films, though her output remained selective, prioritizing roles that intersected with drag and transgender representation.Judging and Media Appearances
Caliente joined the judging panel of Drag Race Philippines as a permanent judge upon the show's premiere on August 17, 2022, serving alongside host Pauleen Luna and co-judge KaladKang Gary Patrol.[37] Her appointment, announced on May 14, 2022, leveraged her experience as a RuPaul's Drag Race alum to provide insights on drag performance standards within the franchise's international expansion.[38] [39] She continued in this role through the third season, which concluded in 2024, offering critiques on challenges ranging from runway presentations to comedy sketches, often emphasizing authenticity and cultural relevance given her Filipino heritage.[40] In media interviews tied to her judging duties, Caliente discussed the unique dynamics of the Philippine edition, highlighting differences in contestant humor and local drag influences compared to U.S. versions. For instance, in a September 7, 2023, podcast appearance on Exposed, she elaborated on evaluating season 2 performances and the pressures of mentoring emerging Filipino queens.[41] She also featured in an August 17, 2022, exclusive interview with Spill the Tea, where she addressed backlash from some fans questioning her qualifications and defended her selection based on her bilingual fluency and cultural ties to the Philippines.[42] Beyond judging-specific coverage, Caliente made guest appearances on platforms discussing broader drag topics, including a November 22, 2022, interview on OUTtv's Translation series, where she previewed the show's unscripted elements and shared career reflections.[43] Her visibility extended to promotional events, such as DragCon panels, where she commented on franchise evolutions, though these were not formal judging roles.[44] No records indicate guest judging stints on other Drag Race iterations or non-franchise competition shows prior to her death on April 27, 2025.[45]Activism and Public Stance
Transgender Rights Advocacy
Caliente publicly identified as a transgender woman on January 22, 2016, becoming the fifth RuPaul's Drag Race contestant to do so.[46] Following her transition, including hormone replacement therapy, she used her platform to promote transgender visibility in entertainment and media.[5] In a 2022 interview, Caliente highlighted the vulnerabilities faced by transgender individuals, stating, "I feel like if you are not cis, hetero [or] white in this world, there’s really no protection for you as far as in human rights. We’re fighting for the bare minimum."[14] She criticized ongoing legislative efforts restricting bodily autonomy, noting, "With all the legislations that are happening... it’s crazy how the government is trying to have a say in how we treat our bodies."[14] Caliente also addressed employment barriers for trans people, particularly trans women of color, advocating for open discussions on survival sex work as a response to systemic exclusion from traditional jobs.[14] Her contributions extended to institutional roles advancing trans representation; in 2022, she served as a judge on Drag Race Philippines alongside KaladKaren, marking the first instance of two openly transgender judges in the franchise's history.[47] This position amplified trans voices in global drag culture, which Caliente described as essential for inspiring youth: "I hope that they can see at least somebody like them. No matter what, representation really does matter."[14] Caliente's advocacy earned posthumous recognition in 2025 when she was inducted into the National LGBTQ+ Wall of Honor at the Stonewall Inn as part of an all-transgender class of honorees, acknowledged for trailblazing visibility and leadership in the transgender community amid political challenges.[48][49]Involvement in Broader LGBTQ+ Causes
Caliente participated in "Drag Lobby Day" on Capitol Hill on June 25, 2024, organized by MoveOn Political Action, where she joined fellow drag performers Joey Jay and Brigitte Bandit to meet with lawmakers and advocate for the passage of the Equality Act, which seeks to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity across various sectors including employment, housing, and public accommodations.[50][51] This effort highlighted drag performers' role in pushing for comprehensive federal protections for the LGBTQ+ community amid ongoing legislative challenges.[52] Beyond legislative lobbying, Caliente advocated for the destigmatization of sex work, drawing from her own experiences as a former sex worker to emphasize the need for greater respect and safety measures for those in the industry, a cause intersecting with LGBTQ+ vulnerabilities particularly among marginalized performers and trans individuals engaging in survival sex work.[53][14] In interviews, she criticized sex shaming and called for societal changes to protect workers, noting that many in drag and queer communities rely on such labor due to limited opportunities.[54] Caliente publicly disclosed her HIV-positive status in 2020, using her platform to combat stigma and promote awareness within the broader LGBTQ+ community, where HIV remains a persistent health disparity issue tied to historical epidemics and ongoing prevention needs.[55] This openness aligned with her efforts to foster visibility for intersecting identities, including as a person of color in queer spaces.[56] Her contributions to LGBTQ+ causes earned posthumous recognition with induction into the National LGBTQ+ Wall of Honor at the Stonewall Inn in 2025, selected by the International Imperial Court Council and National LGBTQ Task Force alongside other trans icons for advancing community equality and cultural impact.[48][57] As a Filipino-American figure, she also supported visibility for LGBTQ+ rights in the Philippines through her judging role on RuPaul's Drag Race Philippines and public commentary on regional struggles for acceptance.[58]Controversies and Criticisms
Backlash to Public Roles
Upon her appointment as a permanent judge for the inaugural season of RuPaul's Drag Race Philippines, announced on May 16, 2022, Jiggly Caliente encountered criticism from segments of the Drag Race fanbase.[38] Detractors highlighted her early eliminations in both season 4 (third episode, April 30, 2012) and All Stars 6 (first episode, June 11, 2021) as evidence of insufficient qualifications compared to alternatives like Manila Luzon, the season 3 runner-up with Filipino heritage.[59] Fans expressed preferences for Luzon to judge or host, citing her established presence in Filipino drag media, including her upcoming role hosting Drag Den with Manila Luzon.[59] Caliente addressed the backlash via Instagram on July 20, 2022, stating, "I understand you wanted Manila Luzon to be in my place. She has her own show coming soon where you can support, love, [and] glorify her there. Can I just have this moment? I'm not asking for much."[59] Her selection was defended by supporters for leveraging her Filipino roots—born in Laguna province—and experience as one of two transgender judges alongside KaladKaren, emphasizing cultural authenticity over competition longevity.[59] The controversy remained confined largely to online fan discussions, with no formal challenges from producers World of Wonder.[59] Subsequent seasons amplified intra-community scrutiny, as some viewers on platforms like Reddit accused Caliente of harsh critiquing verging on bullying toward contestants, prompting isolated calls for her dismissal in August 2024 amid season 2 episodes. These claims, however, lacked substantiation in mainstream reporting and were countered by tributes to her mentorship post her April 2025 passing.[60] No broader public or institutional backlash materialized against her judging, acting roles in series like Pose (2019–2021), or media appearances.Broader Debates on Drag Culture and Lifestyle Risks
Drag culture, encompassing performance art involving exaggerated gender expression often in nightlife settings, has been associated with elevated health risks documented in empirical studies. Performers frequently face musculoskeletal injuries from high-impact moves such as "death drops" and prolonged wear of restrictive footwear and costumes, leading to pulled hamstrings, joint strain, and asymmetries in strength.[61][62] Dermatological issues, including skin irritation from adhesives and makeup, compound these physical demands, while the occupational environment in alcohol-centric venues exacerbates exposure to hazards.[61][63] Substance use represents a significant lifestyle risk within drag communities, driven by performance-related stress and the normalization of alcohol and drugs in club atmospheres. Qualitative and case studies indicate higher rates of substance involvement among drag performers compared to general populations, with pre-show consumption often used to manage anxiety, contributing to dependencies like cocaine use disorder.[64][63] Broader LGBTQ+ data, encompassing many drag participants, show elevated misuse of substances such as marijuana and prescription drugs, linked to minority stress and nightlife culture, with meta-analyses confirming increased odds of abuse or dependence.[65][66] These patterns persist despite some performers reporting short-term mood benefits from drag, as longitudinal risks of addiction and related health decline outweigh isolated positives.[64] Infectious disease transmission, particularly HIV, poses acute risks tied to overlapping demographics in drag culture, including transgender women and men who have sex with men. Surveys of U.S. transgender women reveal HIV positivity rates of 26-42%, with racial disparities amplifying vulnerability—62% among Black respondents in one national sample—attributable to factors like unprotected sex in high-risk networks and barriers to consistent prevention.[67][68] Drag performers, often navigating similar social and sexual milieus, exhibit analogous exposures, as evidenced by public disclosures from figures in the community and CDC data showing rising transmissions among transgender populations from 550 cases in 2014 to 601 in 2018.[69][70] Mental health debates highlight correlations between drag involvement and elevated depression, potentially stemming from psychosocial stressors like public scrutiny and identity performance rather than inherent catharsis. Research indicates that greater drag participation predicts higher depressive symptoms and lower resilience in some cohorts, challenging narratives of uniform psychological uplift while underscoring causal links to external marginalization and internal conflicts.[71][72] Critics of drag's cultural expansion argue these risks reflect unaddressed lifestyle factors, including hyper-sexualized environments and delayed health interventions, rather than external biases alone, with empirical data from peer-reviewed sources prioritizing performer-reported harms over advocacy-driven minimizations.[73][74] Mainstream academic and media analyses, often influenced by institutional sympathies toward LGBTQ+ narratives, may underemphasize these causal realities in favor of affirmative framing, necessitating scrutiny of source incentives when evaluating drag's net societal impact.[75]Personal Life and Health Challenges
Relationships and Identity Transition
Caliente, born Biancabella S. Castro on October 28, 1988, in Laguna, Philippines, immigrated to the United States in 1991 and initially performed as a drag queen under the stage name Jiggly Caliente, presenting a hyper-feminine persona while living as a male off-stage.[1] In early 2016, she publicly identified as a transgender woman, announcing on social media and in interviews her decision to transition and live full-time as female outside of drag performances, adopting her legal name Bianca Castro as her everyday identity.[5] This disclosure followed personal reflection and fan correspondence expressing similar struggles, which she cited as a motivating factor for her openness.[76] Her transition emphasized a distinction from her drag career, framing it as an authentic gender identity rather than performance, though she continued drag work intermittently.[77] Public details on Caliente's romantic relationships remain limited, with no verified records of marriages, long-term partners, or public partnerships emerging in media coverage or her own statements during her lifetime.[78] Family statements following her death highlighted close familial bonds and friendships but omitted mention of spouses or significant others, suggesting she maintained privacy in this aspect of her personal life.[79] Her public persona focused more on professional and activist roles than intimate disclosures, aligning with a pattern observed among many performers in drag and transgender communities who compartmentalize personal matters.Chronic Health Issues and Lifestyle Factors
Jiggly Caliente did not publicly disclose any chronic health conditions throughout her career spanning over a decade in drag performance and media. Contemporary reports and family statements following her March 2025 hospitalization for a severe infection referenced no underlying chronic illnesses as contributing factors to the rapid progression requiring amputation of most of her right leg on April 24, 2025.[80][81] Medical literature on similar severe infections leading to amputation often implicates risk amplifiers such as uncontrolled diabetes or vascular disease, but no such diagnoses were attributed to Caliente in verified accounts.[82] Her lifestyle as a touring drag artist and judge entailed high physical and logistical demands, including international travel for events like DragCon and judging duties on RuPaul's Drag Race Philippines season 3, which she withdrew from amid her health crisis.[83] Performances frequently involved extended wear of restrictive footwear and costumes, late-night schedules, and exposure to crowded venues, elements common in the drag profession that can strain mobility and immune resilience over time, though direct causation to her infection remains unestablished in public records.[84] Caliente's advocacy work and acting roles, such as in Pose, further compounded a peripatetic routine with limited downtime for preventive health measures.[85]Final Illness, Amputation, and Death
In early April 2025, Bianca Castro-Arabejo, known professionally as Jiggly Caliente, was hospitalized due to a severe infection that necessitated emergency medical intervention.[81] Her family publicly announced on April 24, 2025, via Instagram that the infection had progressed to the point where most of her right leg required amputation to prevent further systemic spread.[86] This procedure was performed amid efforts to stabilize her condition, though details on the infection's origin—potentially linked to underlying vascular or metabolic vulnerabilities common in such cases—were not specified in the family's statement.[87] Despite the amputation, complications arose rapidly, with reports indicating sepsis as a likely factor exacerbating her decline.[88] Caliente passed away on April 27, 2025, at 4:42 a.m., just three days after the amputation announcement, surrounded by family and close friends.[79] Her family confirmed the death in a subsequent Instagram post, emphasizing her peaceful departure while requesting privacy during their grief.[89] Autopsy or official medical reports have not been publicly released, leaving the precise causal chain—whether primary infection, post-surgical sepsis, or compounded by chronic factors—attributed primarily to the acute infectious process.[90]Works
Discography
Jiggly Caliente's musical output centers on her debut studio album, T.H.O.T. Process, released on March 9, 2018, via Producer Entertainment Group. The 12-track project blends pop rap and electropop elements, featuring collaborations with fellow drag performers including RuPaul on the intro, Sharon Needles on "I Don't Give a Fuck," Peppermint on "Pretty Girl Anthem," and Alaska Thunderfuck and Ginger Minj on "All This Body."[91][92][93] The album's lead single, "Fckboi," preceded the full release on March 1, 2018, and appears as track two, emphasizing themes of nightlife and personal agency through explicit lyrics and upbeat production. Other notable tracks include "Damn!!! Jiggly" and "'Twas the Night (Interlude)," contributing to the record's runtime of approximately 31 minutes.[94][93] Caliente also contributed to holiday compilations, such as vocals on "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" and "Deck the Halls" from drag-themed Christmas releases, though these were not standalone singles under her name. No further studio albums followed prior to her death in 2025.[31]Track listing for T.H.O.T. Process
- "Intro" (feat. RuPaul)
- "Fckboi"
- "Damn!!! Jiggly"
- "I Don't Give a Fuck" (feat. Sharon Needles)
- "Pretty Girl Anthem" (feat. Peppermint)
- "All This Body" (feat. Alaska Thunderfuck & Ginger Minj)
- "We Wish You a Merry Christmas"
- "Deck the Halls"
- "Ratchet Christmas"
- "'Twas the Night (Interlude)"
- Additional tracks as per full listing (e.g., filler or variants in explicit editions).[93][94]
Filmography
Caliente began her acting career with a minor role as a drag queen in the television series Ugly Betty in 2010.[95] She gained wider recognition through her competition appearances on RuPaul's Drag Race, first as a contestant in season 4 (2012) and later in All Stars season 6 (2021).[17] Her breakthrough dramatic role came in Pose (2018–2019), where she portrayed the recurring character Veronica Ferocity, performing out of drag under her birth name, Bianca Castro.[96][97] Additional television credits include guest spots in Playing House (2014), Broad City (2015, as a shop owner), Search Party (2016), and Wigs in a Blanket (2021).[98] In film, she appeared in Hurricane Bianca: From Russia with Hate (2018), The Queens (2019), and Milkwater (2020).[99] Caliente also hosted Drag Race Philippines starting in 2022, blending performance with on-screen presenting.[100]| Year | Title | Role | Medium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Ugly Betty | Drag Queen | TV series |
| 2012 | RuPaul's Drag Race (Season 4) | Herself (contestant) | TV series |
| 2014 | Playing House | Guest role | TV series |
| 2015 | Broad City | Shop Owner | TV series |
| 2016 | Search Party | Supporting role | TV series |
| 2018 | Hurricane Bianca: From Russia with Hate | Supporting role | Film |
| 2018–2019 | Pose | Veronica Ferocity (recurring) | TV series |
| 2019 | The Queens | Herself/Performer | Film |
| 2020 | Milkwater | Supporting role | Film |
| 2021 | RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars (Season 6) | Herself (contestant) | TV series |
| 2021 | Wigs in a Blanket | Guest role | TV series |
| 2022– | Drag Race Philippines | Host | TV series |