It’s been a whirlwind of a weekend for Trinity the Tuck. The drag queen was declared winner of RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 4 along with Monét X Change, in the series’ first-ever double crowning. Both queens were inducted into the Drag Race hall of fame and were awarded $100,000 paychecks.

The wins didn’t come without controversy though; several viewers took to social media to vent that a tie delegitimized the meaning of the coveted crown. Trinity disagrees.

“I don't think that sharing the win devalues it, for the fact that we both got a humongous, beautiful crown and we both got the full prize money,” the star tells Billboard. “We both legitimately won.”

Trinity caught up with Billboard to talk about her All Stars 4 win, her backup characters for Snatch Game, and whether her and Monét will be recreating the infamous tie scene in To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar: “If we could get RuPaul up in there too, as Rachel Tensions -- bitch, I would live.”

Billboard: What does winning All Stars 4 mean for you?

Trinity the Tuck: I come from a really small town in Alabama, so never in my life would I have thought that I would be in the position that I'm in now, where I've been able to travel and meet so many amazing people and do so many amazing things. I set myself a goal to win Drag Race before I was even cast on season nine. And when I didn't achieve that on season nine, coming back to All Stars, I wanted to win. It's a huge goal of mine. I'm proud of myself, I feel like I deserve it.

Ahead of the finale, a fan suggested a double crowning with Monét on Twitter to which you responded, “no thx.” Have your feelings have changed?

This is the thing: as a competitor, I come from pageants and they just don't have ties. You know what I mean? So me saying, "No, thanks," you know, would we prefer there to be one winner? Of course we would. Does that mean I'm totally against the idea? Obviously not, ‘cause girl, that's what it is. But if I had my choice, obviously I would prefer there to be one definite winner. But I'm grateful for the position that I'm in, for sure.

One thing that's gotten lost in the reactions is that a major television network just awarded not one, but two gay men for channeling their femininity into art, and I think that's pretty neat.

I think right now, especially with the political climate that we're in with America, this outcome is the perfect representation of where our country should be. We should be awarding everyone for their hard work, no matter their skin color. Going into the finale, I had the most wins, but the final episode, Monét slayed that. So if you really judged it fair, she would've won that challenge. We would've been tied -- so that, to me, was fair.

There have been discussions that all the winners of All Stars are white and blonde. Were you nervous heading into the finale of any backlash if you had won on your own?

Here's the thing, I don't believe that there's this conspiracy that you have to be white, skinny and blonde to win. I don't believe that that is true. I think every single crowning that Drag Race has done has been the appropriate winner out of who made it to the final two. Was I scared for backlash? No, because I think everything happens for a reason and my track record speaks for itself.

I think people need to focus more on the entertainers’ talents, and let those speak for themselves. I mean look at the cast. Like 80 percent were queens of color, which is amazing. There needs to more representation like that on TV and there was. And there was some stiff competition. The thing is, any of us in the top four could have won, easily.

Speaking of the top four, throughout the whole season you talked about wanting to be competing against the best of the best. Manila Luzon’s elimination was pretty controversial because she was the frontrunner. Do you wish that she was in the top four?

I absolutely believed that Manila deserved to be in the top four. Depending on the rest of her run, she would've went definitely top two. Manila is a phenomenal competitor and absolutely deserved to be top four.

I still think with the girls who were top four, I'm still competing with the best because they really turned it out. This was a very, very hard season and the thing about an hour and a half on television, you don't get to see everything that we had to do. It was grueling. It is a competition and so much goes into it, and all of us work super, super, super hard. And so the top four was very, very deserving.

You had some really great moments on All Stars, including your Caitlyn Jenner impression in the Snatch Game challenge. I’m curious: did you have a backup planned if Gia Gunn ended up doing Caitlyn?

Oh yeah. I had two other backup plans, but trust me, I was gonna play Caitlyn no matter what. Even if there had to be two Caitlyns. She could be Caitlyn, but bitch let me tell you, I was gonna be Caitlyn. [Laughs] I was Caitlyn. But I also had Jennifer Coolidge and Iris Apfel as backup.

Fans have jokingly compared this tie to the scene in the beginning of To Wong Foo, where RuPaul declares a tie in a drag pageant. Is there any chance you and Monét will do a show as Vida Boheme and Noxeema Jackson?

I'm totally down. Look, drag is not supposed to be taken seriously, where you can't make fun of yourself or the situation or whatever. I would totally be down for doing a number with Monét. And bitch, if we could get RuPaul up in there too, as Rachel Tensions -- bitch, I would live.

And Leo could be Chi-Chi, now that he's dabbled in drag.

[Laughs] Oh my god, could you imagine? I would love that.