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Welcome back listeners! Today is a very special episode... We are welcoming Veronique Beaupre, she is an accomplished Montreal based hairstylist and owner of Local B salon. While chatting with Vero we had the pleasure to hear about her career journey, her experience working at New York Fashion Week as well as the road to owning her own salon and becoming a mentor. We also had a very open conversation about non black or POC hairstylists working on Black/POC hair textures and the importance of wanting to learn to accommodate to all hair textures when working in this industry. Catch the podcast online: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thefashionfauxpaspodcast/ YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCFiuneNoZIEoq_rv9zKtjQ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@fauxpas.ca Catch Veronique Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/verolocalb/ - https://www.instagram.com/localb_mtl/ Catch Bernie Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kingberniee/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@kingberniee Website - https://www.kingberniee.com Catch YasmineInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/yasisaya/ TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@yasmineisaya With love always and always love.
Black Ramen & HBTKU are Calling all women of color! This panel is to let POC women know that a safe space is required to be ourselves. What we love fuels us to create, and we should be afforded security. Let's develop a better sense of community, pride, and confidence. Women of this industry will share their experiences to help create a safe space for POC women.
“Don't shrink the power of your cultures and ancestors to fit into oppressive systems” - Elmina Bell Have you been curious about ancestral healing but unsure how to engage? Most of us have been disconnected from our ancestors through colonialism, but that doesn't mean we can't access the wisdom that lives on through us. This week I had the huge privilege of getting to talk with Elmina Bell of Mulema Alchemy. In this episode, we talk about re-thinking psychiatric diagnoses from a holistic indigenous perspective. We discuss practical ways to engage with our ancestors. We talk about colonial oppression, racism and how we're each called to do the work of dismantling oppression in different ways according to our unique gifts and calling, how we can re-center spirit in mental health work, de-center whiteness in astrology and how to prepare for the upcoming eclipse season in sidereal Libra. Elmina Bell (she/they) hails from Indigenous African parents from the Indigenous Bantu Sawa/Subu peoples of coastal, southwest Cameroon in Central Africa, and the Ewe peoples of Togo West Africa and was born and raised in the United States. Elmina is multiply neurodivergent/neuroexpansive person who centers Indigenous holistic psychologies and cosmologies for improved mental health, community building, and for the dismantling of oppressive colonial capitalistic societal systems that are at the root of health and housing disparities. Their work as a trained trauma-informed peer support facilitator, crisis counselor, tropical and sidereal astrologer, sound healer, and medium, is guided by Mulema Alchemy. Mulema means heart in the Indigenous Sawa languages of her parents and she believes in the transformative, alchemical power of the heart. https://mulemaalchemy.wordpress.com/about-mulema-alchemy/ EVENTS: Love in the Depths, a symposium held by Depth Psychologists of Color in honor of ancestor bell hooks Saturday October 22nd 10am-12:30 PST https://www.eventbrite.com/e/bell-hooks-love-in-the-depths-registration-382331161797 Hye Won Hye: A Roundtable Decolonizing and Re-Indigenizing Mars Themes by Sankofa Rising Indigenous Astro-Saturday November 12th from 1-4pm EST https://www.eventbrite.com/e/hye-won-hye-a-roundtable-decolonizing-and-re-indigenizing-mars-themes-tickets-437466844107 NOTE FROM ELMINA: Sidereal Astrology actually gave me an opportunity to look at ways I can develop roots and foundational astral interpretations that can be applicable regardless of climate while honoring locality. There's something foundational in Sidereal that works closely with constellations that were used long ago and shares similarities with fixed stars which is the type of astrology that all indigenous societies used. I talk about this more through Sankofa Rising Indigenous Astro, a community and podcast with Black/POC astrologers using Indigenous cosmologies, healing justice, and decolonial approaches. Find more at : https://www.instagram.com/sankofarising_indigenousastro/
Episode 70 My Guests: Andy Nikhomvan Anthony Christopher Milfelt A Splash from the past. Join myself, Flotsam & Jetsam as we unpack our summer vacation under the sea with THE LITTLE MERMAID. We discussed our fav shows and roles and positions as BLACK/POC in the industry. I didn't intend to have so may touching moments but the fish will fish. you might need to grab a tissue. PRESS PLAY
Episode 70 My Guests: Andy Nikhomvan Anthony Christopher Milfelt A Splash from the past. Join myself, Flotsam & Jetsam as we unpack our summer vacation under the sea with THE LITTLE MERMAID. We discussed our fav shows and roles and positions as BLACK/POC in the industry. I didn't intend to have so may touching moments but the fish will fish. you might need to grab a tissue. PRESS PLAY
This episode we discuss how racism and homophobia both sneaked their way into the horrible occurrences of Jeffrey Dahmer and the numerous Black and POC men and boys that were victimized by him. It's disgusting how the justice system/Milwaukee police failed thee Black/POC and gay community once again. Who's Up Next? Segment: Me! make sure you're following me on social media @hausofebon What Now? Segment: Do some self care after listening to this episode because it's important to stay in a safe and peaceful headspace. Make sure to follow and SUBSCRIBE to us wherever you get your favorite podcasts: Google, Apple and Spotify podcasts. Don't forget to share with us, you listening to our podcast! Rate us 5 stars as well because we are a 5 STAR CHICK! #PERIOD. Send in your questions and comments to the podcast at whatnowquery@gmail.com. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eric-williams114/support
Jasmin Hernandez (she/her) is the Black Latinx founder & Editor in Chief of Gallery Gurls, an award-winning digital space celebrating Black & POC in contemporary art since 2012. Gallery Gurls has been featured in Vogue, Artnet, and Artsy. Hernandez's writing has appeared in Harper's Bazaar, Latina, PopSugar, ELLE, CNN Style, etc. Her debut book, We Are Here: Visionaries of Color Transforming the Art World, was released by Abrams (2021). Her writing has been awarded and funded by The Awesome Foundation (2018) & Critical Minded (2020), and she was a 2021 finalist for The Andy Warhol Foundation Art Writers Grant for Short-Form Writing. In 2022, she became a recipient in the inaugural cohort of Creatives Rebuild New York's Guaranteed Income for Artists program. She is a proud Dominican Yorker, based in Harlem. You'll find this Parsons alumna gallery hopping locally and globally, usually sipping on an oat milk cafe au lait, and constantly reading Black womxn authors.
How can interracial and Intercultural relationships save the world? I bet that's a question you never asked yourself. How can you integrate your partner into your family even if your family display racially problematic behaviour? How can you bring your black/brown partner into your family seamlessly? Well, in this week's podcast, you will get the answer to all of these. In this weeks episode, I sit down with Hakeem Allen of The Anti Racist Social Club. A charity set up to create spaces and resources for open dialogue with White people and non-Black POC about becoming anti-racist. We both have experience of making interracial relationships work and how to create safe spaces for difficult conversations. We open up about how we have made our relationships work, why dating preferences can be problematic and why interracial relationships are complex. The key topics are:
GET READY FOR THE PART TWOOOO! How often do you think about intersectionality? In this episode, we have the opportunity to speak with Disability activist, Keri Gray. We got to explore the intersections of being both Black/POC and Disabled because it is very important to acknowledge those things. Keri also discussed the importance of the NAMD Advocates Summit and what she hopes everyone to gain from the experience. We also discussed guilty pleasures and let's just say, it gets salty (LOL). If you haven't already, please check out Keri's website and register for the Summit (withkeri.com/2021summit). To check out more of Keri's work, here is where you can find her: withkeri.com Keri's Instagram: @kerigray90 NAMD Advocates Instagram: @namdadvocates Follow Just a Little Pod on all the things too! Instagram/Twitter: @justalittlepod Facebook: Just a Little Pod Toria's Instagram: @toriajae Ronisha's Instagram: @_ronisha --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/justalittlepod/message
By Matthew Nemeth To celebrate Black History Month I’m doing a rankings list for my top 10 favourite black/poc characters Click here for a list of our iTunes feeds. Information matthew@entertainmenttalk.org Please rate and review us on iTunes @etalkuk Twitter Read More
By Matthew Nemeth To celebrate Black History Month I’m doing a rankings list for my top 10 favourite black/poc characters Click here for a list of our iTunes feeds. Information matthew@entertainmenttalk.org Please rate and review us on iTunes @etalkuk Twitter Read More
By Matthew Nemeth To celebrate Black History Month I’m doing a rankings list for my top 10 favourite black/poc characters Click here for a list of our iTunes feeds. Information matthew@entertainmenttalk.org Please rate and review us on iTunes @etalkuk Twitter Read More
With screenings at Watershed now back up to 6 days a week a look ahead at September highlights coming up.Mark Cosgrove, Watershed Cinema Curator, talks to Gary Thompson, founder of Cables & Cameras, about their Watershed takeover weekend at the end of September – Cables & Cameras Presents:INSPIRED. The weekend features a whole range of conversations, screenings and events that will explore Black/POC culture and talent both in front of and behind the camera.Mark is also joined by Adam Murray from Bristol Black Horror Club. Adam talks about his positive experiences of working with Gary and Cables & Cameras, his upcoming illustrated talk on the history of Black representationin horror films and behind the camera and why he is looking forward to Cables & Cameras Presents:INSPIRED.
Malakai Black destroyed Cody Rhodes during the main event of AEW Dynamite: Homecoming, was the ending Cody promo needed? the AEW Dark with Max Caster is addressed that eventually brought up the discussion in regards to the stigma of mental health in today's society. The debate of should more Black/POC wrestlers be more prominent in the top positions in wrestling? Gresh and Suela hold no punches on this explosive edition of Gresh Unleashed!- Gresh Digital Discord: https://discord.gg/QHCzpCj- Gresh Shop: https://greshapparel.creator-spring.com/- Gresh on Patreon: https://patreon.com/greshdigital - Gresh Unleashed Twitter: https://twitter.com/greshunleashed- Gresh Unleashed Instagram: https://instagram.com/greshunleashed- Follow Gresh: https://solo.to/gresh- Follow Suela: https://solo.to/suelahttps://joshuagresham.org
"If you don't see it in the world, see that as an opportunity." Wise words from this week's guest, the one and only Joseph Cuillier. Joseph is perhaps most well known for The Black School, an experimental art school teaching Black/PoC students and allies to become agents of change through art workshops on radical Black politics and public interventions that address local community needs. I spoke to Joseph fresh from his move back to New Orleans, and he spoke on how the city feels now in the midst of gentrification and other new developments. We also spoke on his work with The Black School and the school's principles, the unique studio model that helps fund the school, and how he works to center Black love in such a unique learning space. Joseph is truly building upon a family legacy to help educate the next generation and beyond! Links Joseph Cuillier's Website Joseph Cuillier on Instagram The Black School The Black School on Instagram 2021 Revision Path Audience SurveyIt's time for our annual audience survey! Tell us what you think about Revision Path, and you could win a $100 Amazon.com gift card! Visit revisionpath.com/survey to give us your feedback. Survey ends on May 31. Sponsored by Brevity & Wit Brevity & Wit is a strategy and design firm committed to designing a more inclusive and equitable world.We accomplish this through graphic design, presentations and workshops around I-D-E-A: inclusion, diversity, equity, and accessibility.If you’re curious to learn how to combine a passion for I-D-E-A with design, check us out at brevityandwit.com.Brevity & Wit — creative excellence without the grind. Like this episode? Then subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, SoundCloud, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite shows. Subscribe and leave us a 5-star rating and a review! Thanks so much to all of you who have already rated and reviewed us! Revision Path is brought to you by Lunch, a multidisciplinary creative studio in Atlanta, GA. It is produced by Maurice Cherry and engineered and edited by RJ Basilio. You can also follow Revision Path on Instagram and Twitter. Come chat with us! And thank you for listening!
This episode contains strong language, as the title of the episode suggests. Listener discretion is advised.This week, hosts Jarrett Hill and Tre'vell Anderson are talking about the "n" word. No, not Chloé Zhao's 2020 indie hit Nomadland. We're talking about the word n*gger. And n*gga. And Tre'vell's personal favorite: nig nogs. The word has been in the news rather recently with a number of newsrooms having to address its use by members of its staff. It seems the word is always up for debate in white spaces, among non-Black POC and even Black folks about who can and can't and who should or shouldn't use the word. Jarrett and Tre'vell examine the debate of it all and share their own experiences with its use. But first…T(ea) TimeTre'vell and Jarrett discuss media burn-out and the cost of remaining plugged in online. DIS/Honorable MentionsThis week, Jarrett has an honorable mention for the new Youtube Original series Super Sema as well as an honorable mention for LA artists D Smoke and Sir. He also has a dishonorable mention for the raggedy duo of capitalism and white supremacy which work together to make everything worse. Email: FANTI@maximumfun.org@FANTIpodcast@Jarrett Hill@rayzon (Tre’Vell)@FANTIpodcast@TreVellAnderson@JarrettHill@Swish (Producer Laura Swisher)FANTI is produced and distributed by MaximumFun.orgLaura Swisher is the senior producer.Jordan Kauwling is the associate producer.
First & foremost- Happy Birthday Taylor ! And Shop Sleek'ds new line ! This weeks episode we blabber on about keeping secrets from your partner, non-Black POC's using the term "n*igga", sidebitches, and share some of our current fave underated artists. Tune In ! &&, please make sure to rate and review the podcast! Also follow us on Twitter: @GirlzPod ! IG: @girlzuninterruptedpod Hosts: @fkalexbelike.jpg @_queen.shan @__taylornicole__! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/girlz-uninterrupted/support
Ding dong Rush Limbaugh is dead so there is that... We have two new candidates joining the city council race. City of Boston getting sued for being trash at contracting Black/POC business. Protesting is still going down in Myanmar and Ebola is making a come back.
Bri sits down with Grace Youn (pronouns: she/her) to 'spill the tea' about being a non-Black POC “influencer” on Instagram and the model minority myth. Grace can be found on Instagram at @graceplaysviolin During the episode we discussed: Bang Bank Cookie Company The untold story of wrestler Andrew Johnson’s dreadlocks *This episode was recorded on Thursday, July 23, 2020 - - - The Tea with Bri can be found on Instagram at @TheTeaWithBri. You can send me an email at theteawithbri@gmail.com The website is TheTeaWithBriPodcast.com Interested in being a guest? Vist theteawithbripodcast.com/guest ----- This podcast was recorded via Zoom. The theme song and other music in this episode are by Mama Duke. Madyson Russell designed the logo.
Bri sits down with Grace Youn (pronouns: she/her) to 'spill the tea' about being a non-Black POC “influencer” on Instagram and the model minority myth. Grace can be found on Instagram at @graceplaysviolin During the episode we discussed: Bang Bank Cookie Company The untold story of wrestler Andrew Johnson’s dreadlocks *This episode was recorded on Thursday, July 23, 2020 - - - The Tea with Bri can be found on Instagram at @TheTeaWithBri. You can send me an email at theteawithbri@gmail.com The website is TheTeaWithBriPodcast.com Interested in being a guest? Vist theteawithbripodcast.com/guest ----- This podcast was recorded via Zoom. The theme song and other music in this episode are by Mama Duke. Madyson Russell designed the logo.
Hear from two presenters at EMU's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration provide a preview of their program topics. Ash Gaunt, a graduate assistant at EMU's LGBT Resource Center, discusses their presentation on the fight for LGBTQ+ rights and dismantling white supremacy. Dr. Sadaf Siddiqui-Ali, an associate professor in EMU's School of Communication, Media, and Theatre Arts, presents her research on depictions of Black and non-Black POC in modern media. Attendees can preregister for these programs and others via this link.Reporter: Kaila TrefilProducers: Ashlee Buhler, Ronia Cabansag
We made it to 2021! This week, we dish about Trinity the Tuck’s antibodies, Hilaria Baldwin, A B-52's sponsored Pandemic and much more. We are joined by the fabulous Dot DeVille. She is an NYC based Drag Queen and Entertainment Director at Hearst where she oversees the editorial bookings for Cosmopolitan and Marie Claire. She has interviewed celebrities for Bon Appétit, Marie Claire,Nylon,Teen Vogue, Vanity Fair and many other publications. Follow her on instagram @dotdeville . A great place to donate to right now is 'The Black School.' (TBS) is an experimental art school teaching Black/PoC students and allies to become agents of change through art workshops on radical Black politics and public interventions that address local community needs.https://www.gofundme.com/f/theblackschool
Nora is a 24-year-old activist using her Instagram account to help white & non-Black POC be better allies. She works full-time as the Director of Growth + Admissions at Rivet School, a California-based nonprofit that helps Black and brown, low-income, first-generation working adults earn an accelerated and affordable college degree to unlock economic mobility.
The Noggin Podcast (A Cozy Mental Health Advocacy Podcast) with Kyarra Keele
In response to Trevor Noah's reupload 2 days ago of his black mental heath video with over 1.6 million views, in this cozy episode I'm doing my part as a fellow black woman & compassionate mental health advocate to further this important dialogue by sharing what we can learn to improve from a potential missed opportunity in that video, while highlighting 5 empowering self care advocates (like "Plant Kween" on Instagram) & mental health resources for people of color, built off of inclusion and cultural understanding, especially for my lovely black kings, my beautiful lgbt+ community, & those looking for affordable self-care tools. (Season 3 arrived early with a new mic! Official launch Monday 1/11/21 5am EST) For episode transcripts/info on The Noggin Podcast Official Website: https://theaplusafro.wixsite.com/thenogginpodcast The Trevor Noah video I'm responding to: If You Don't Know, Now You Know: Mental Health Stigma in the Black Community | The Daily Show Twitter: @Noggin_Podcast (3/20/21 Edit: Youtube Channel is under reconstruction) Black/POC professional mental health resources & black creators mentioned in this episode that I love: https://therapyforblackmen.org (Affordable therapy & life coaching for black men by fellow black therapists & other therapists of color; financial aid available on resources tab. https://www.inclusivetherapists.com (Affordable & sliding scale options for both online & in person therapy, centering the needs of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, LGBT+ community, people with disabilities, & the full neurodiversity spectrum) 3 positive self-care/mental health black creators to support, share, and explore! Support the radiant Christopher/"Plant Kween" on their Instagram: (Brooklyn-based Black queer femme kween; community building through plants) Listen to The Sugar Jar Podcast with soothing Yasmine Cheyenne (gentle black healing expert, speaker & mental health advocate: Follow Yasmine's Instagram) Follow Nedra Glover Tawwab on her Instagram full of wisdom, Pinterest, & her website (Black therapist of 13 years, boundaries expert, author & content creator; Nedra's new book: Set Boundaries, Find Peace) If you know someone who is struggling and could use a laugh, encouragement, & mental health resources, please share this episode link with them! Enjoy this podcast & value our cozy space? You can support The Noggin Podcast by becoming one of my beautiful Patreon supporters here: https://www.patreon.com/TheNogginPodcast Thank you so much & muchisimas gracias! P.S I've been using Medterra CBD isolate (THC-free) for 6+ months & I'm so grateful it improved my mental health & honestly changed my life (Episode coming soon!) If you're curious to try CBD for your mental health, you can use my zesty 15% off discount code(COZYMHDISCOUNT): https://medterracbd.com/traffic.asp?affid=16263&subid1= I'll see you in the next episode! Nos vemos en el proximo episodio! -Kyarra Keele --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenogginpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thenogginpodcast/support
In the debut episode of They Want Our Sauce (T.W.O.S.), Chris and Xavier are joined by The Black Bean NYC, a coffee blogger who reports on Black owned establishments, particularly Black/POC owned coffee shops. Catch a vibe while we discuss supporting shops that give back to the neighborhoods they reside in. Along with the cultural history of coffee and an overview of dope coffee brands to check out. Dont' forget to subscribe!
Queen & J. are two womanist race nerds talking liberation, politics, and pop-culture over tea. Drink up! On this episode… Do Black people need to be on the same page about the sh!t non-Black people say? Then investment advisor Lydia Idem joins us to discuss the future of water, water futures, what they, who owns water in this babylon country, and whether you can play in the stock market and dismantle white supremacist patriarchal capitalism at the same time. This week’s hotlist - Our pets don’t respect us, honoring rest, the Black joy that held us down in 2020, negro solstice and Black superpowers, harm reduction and prioritizing the harmed, everyone can’t be down with AAVE - stop trying, affirm a brokerage account, investing your investments in investing ass Black people that need you to invest, you got a 401k or nah? You got $5 for stocks and bawnds? And water futures are confusing but we figured it out. . .we think? THIS WEEKS SPONSOR 635 Community Health Collective’s Trauma Sensitive Yoga (TS Yoga) Visit 635communityhealthcollective.com/ Or email them at 635communityhealthcollective@gmail.com SPECIAL GUEST Lydia Idem, Investment Advisor Twitter @faithmight https://twitter.com/faithmight Instagram @faithmight https://www.instagram.com/faithmight/ EPISODE TIMESTAMPS Libations: 5:39 Donation libations: 18:21 Affirmations: 20:48 Non-Black folks using AAVE, and the Black people who love them: 23:07 Water on the stock market? 44:14 Investor Lydia Idem tells us about water futures 46:13 Who said they could trade water? 55:48 Because climate change? 57:43 China highkey colonizing Nigeria 59:43 The “free market” illusion 1:02:06 The stock market for womanist race nerds 1:07:25 Investing in Black people 1:13:39 Tweet us while you listen! #teawithqj @teawithqj and add #podin on twitter to help others discover Tea with Queen and J. podcast! WEBSITE www.TeaWithQueenAndJ.com SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter: twitter.com/teawithqj Instagram: Instagram.com/teawithqj Facebook: www.facebook.com/TeawithQueenandJ Tumblr: teawithqueenandj.tumblr.com EMAIL & SPONSOR INQUIRIES teawithqueenandj@gmail.com DONATE www.paypal.me/teawithqj OR www.patreon.com/teawithqj Where to Donate Your Money and Time to Help Protestors: https://nyulocal.com/where-to-donate-your-money-and-time-to-help-protesters-ef2727d7a9d2 How to continue support for the End SARS movement in Nigeria https://metro.co.uk/2020/10/29/how-to-continue-support-for-the-end-sars-movement-in-nigeria-13487714/ Queen’s Amazon wishlist: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/CXV9ZDWZ3PP9?ref_=wl_share J.’s Amazon wishlist: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/1NP09USMPJ0TB?ref=cm_sw_em_r_wl_ip_VEVWdvdDDemm Send us snail mail: Tea with Queen and J. P.O. Box 1617 229 East 85th Street New York, NY 10028 NOTES AND EXTRA TEA Learn more about The Nap Ministry @thenapministry Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thenapministry Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheNapMinistry Check out episode #223 “The State of Rape Culture” for an expanded discussion on AAVE and non-Black POC: https://soundcloud.com/tea-with-queen-and-j/223-state-of-the-rc This week’s hashtag: #WaterWars This week’s closing clip features The Jokes on Eddie’s, December 21st Black Power Soltice orientation https://www.tiktok.com/@thejokesoneddie/video/6908446299721452805?_ This episode was created, hosted and produced by Naima Lewis Muhammad & Janicia Francis and Edited by Candice Jones Libations to our friend’s Domingo, Tokunbo, and D. Sindayiganza who help keep this show running by paying and supporting Black women. Opening song by Ohene Cornelius Includes music by Chad Milner
#052 - Kay Fabella welcomes Cindu Thomas-George, Founder of Shakti Diversity and Equity Training, and award-winning professor of Communication Studies on Intercultural Communication to discuss the role of allyship for non-Black POC (people of color). As a fellow second-generation American practitioner of Asian descent, Cindu shares how her approach to DEI promotes equity, inclusion, anti-racism, and intercultural competence. Finally, Cindu talks about how non-Black practitioners, allies and advocates can take on a more active role in leading inclusion in the workplace.
Welcome to the 5th episode of Black Americans Making Their Mark: Stories Abroad. This week we are going to Goa,India to visit Whitney Soul Pure Gold Brown Ivory. She is known for her amazing soul vocals from Memphis all the way to South Korea to her amazing yoga online studio she launched during the 2020 global pandemic in efforts to provide a space for the BLACK/POC community to elevate mentally, emotionally, physically, & spiritually based out of Goa, India. It is highly encouraged to connect with Whitney at any of the platforms linked below. Instrgram: @puregoldyoga & @iamwhitneysol Website: https://msha.ke/puregoldyoga/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome, welcome, welcome! In this week's episode, Jess is gleefully and cautiously optimistic about the future of the country but also wondering what we need to do to help our communities to thrive. She's also wondering why non-Black POC can't let Black folks have anything and for that reason, call her Black, not a person of color. This week's fashion tip was brought to you by an article Jess found on the Zoe Report here: https://www.thezoereport.com/p/how-to-keep-sweaters-knits-in-shape-to-stop-pilling-sagging-stretching-40900430 If you like what you hear, be sure to like, comment, share, subscribe and review us on iTunes. You can also send us a coin or two by signing up fo our Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/notcarrieb
Bri sits down with Dr. Aparajita Jeedigunta (pronouns:she/her) to 'spill the tea' about the real lack of diversity, equity and inclusion in women’s leadership, supporting the Black Lives Matter Movement as a non-Black POC (person of color), and how we start talking about getting through this hot mess we’re in right now and beyond. Dr. AJ can be found on Instagram at @drajjeedigunta. During the episode we discussed: New Leaders Council Dr. AJ’s podcast, LEGupward Inclusion Spotlight. The LEGupward Inclusion Spotlight episode I was on. The panel I was on this summer, A Conversation on Racial Inequality & Injustice. How Can We Win - Kimberly Jones *This episode was recorded on Friday, June 12, 2020. Please note that I did not step down from the NLC board nor did I move to Philly. - - - The Tea with Bri can be found on Instagram at @TheTeaWithBri. You can send me an email at theteawithbri@gmail.com The website is TheTeaWithBriPodcast.com ----- This podcast is recorded via Zoom. The theme song and other music in this episode are by Mama Duke. Madyson Russell designed the logo. This podcast is edited by Kaia Moore.
Bri sits down with Dr. Aparajita Jeedigunta (pronouns:she/her) to 'spill the tea' about the real lack of diversity, equity and inclusion in women’s leadership, supporting the Black Lives Matter Movement as a non-Black POC (person of color), and how we start talking about getting through this hot mess we’re in right now and beyond. Dr. AJ can be found on Instagram at @drajjeedigunta. During the episode we discussed: New Leaders Council Dr. AJ’s podcast, LEGupward Inclusion Spotlight. The LEGupward Inclusion Spotlight episode I was on. The panel I was on this summer, A Conversation on Racial Inequality & Injustice. How Can We Win - Kimberly Jones *This episode was recorded on Friday, June 12, 2020. Please note that I did not step down from the NLC board nor did I move to Philly. - - - The Tea with Bri can be found on Instagram at @TheTeaWithBri. You can send me an email at theteawithbri@gmail.com The website is TheTeaWithBriPodcast.com ----- This podcast is recorded via Zoom. The theme song and other music in this episode are by Mama Duke. Madyson Russell designed the logo. This podcast is edited by Kaia Moore.
"There can only room for one of us" -- Join us in welcoming Dr. Tiffany Wiggins from NC State University talk to us about the importance of Black girl mentorship and challenging this idea of Black women having to compete with one another to be acknowledged for their work in the professional realm. Other topics include: m*n who co-opt social justice language to continue to being p.o.s. and wh*te people/non-Black PoC tryna check Black people on Black things (cue *eye roll*) To get connect with our PoC Business Shoutout and guest from this episode, follow @blackgirlmentor on Instagram to find out more about Black girl mentorship and building sisterhood as a lifestyle! For more info about the show, follow @2happyheauxes on Instagram, Facebook & Twitter!
ZombaeKillz, rising Twitch streamer star, joins the Pixel Therapy podcast to talk Blacktivism, invisible disabilities, parenting, and her video game history. Then, she shares how ARK: Survival Evolved taught her how video games could help her manage and overcome chronic pain-- and how she built an inclusive community of gamers on Discord that continues to grow and push back against the "overwhelming monolith of whiteness" that Black folks, non-Black POC, queer and transgender folks, and the disabled and chronically ill community often experience when trying to break into the video gaming industry. Other topics covered: what's it mean when streamers say 'no politics?', gaming with kids, privilege, dealing with racists sliding into your DMs, being on 75 Discord servers, survival games, poop management, paying it forward with love, self-care, living with lupus, moving through grief, lifting each other up, the Black Lives Matter movement. About ZombaeKillz: ZombaeKillz is a variety streamer, activist, BLERD and swear word extraordinaire. Zombae's popularity has exploded in her year-long career-- she's appeared all over the internet, from streams with Lowco, to chatting on Spawn on Me with Kahlief Adams, to mentions in articles from GameStop and TIME. As an activist and community organizer, she advocates in Jackson, Mississippi for the rights of women who are incarcerated, people who are houseless, and the hungry. Follow ZombaeKillz for "C+ gaming but A+ entertainment!" Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/Zombaekillz Twitter: https://twitter.com/ZombaeKillz Donate to Draw A Smile in Jackson, Mississippi: https://www.drawsmile.org/donate/ About Pixel Therapy New episodes drop every three weeks on Tuesdays. Learn more at https://pixeltherapypod.com/ (pixeltherapypod.com) or follow us on social media @pixeltherapypod. If you like what you hear, please take a moment to rate & subscribe!
Ty-Juana is a consumer who fell in love with building community over a beverage and she's responsible for the growth, stability, vision, and direction of TFLUXÈ. She came up with the idea of TFLUXÈ out of frustration after a variety of unwelcoming experiences while navigating certain food and beverage spaces in her hometown. Through TFLUXÈ she enjoys meeting and collaborating with other Black/POC women in the beverage industry, supporting producers of color, and educating consumers according to their taste palate. She's an arts administrator at Berklee College of Music and enjoys traveling, visiting museums, and eating her way through Boston.Charlene is responsible for the operations and strategic vision of TFLUXÈ. She works closely with the owner/founder to build and curate the framework of all components that relate to the business and also works on external partnerships with vendors and sponsors. During her free time Charlene can be found searching for the next best book to read and managing her own consulting business.Suhayl lives for pleasures great and small and everything in-between. Ever the super-connector, she serves as the bridge between TFLUXÈ and the hospitality industry connecting the very best food, wine, beer and spirits to the TFLUXÉ experience. In her 5 to 9 and beyond she can be found chasing street art, enjoying a fine cigar, geeking out on how chocolate is made, or seeking out the best oysters to shuck by the water.Follow Tfluxe:http://www.tfluxe.com/https://www.instagram.com/tfluxe/Follow The Swirl Suite:@SwirlSuitewww.swirlsuite.com Sarita @VineMeUpTanisha @GirlMeetsGlassLeslie @Vino301Glynis @Vino_NoireSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/SwirlSuite. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ty-Juana is a consumer who fell in love with building community over a beverage and shes responsible for the growth, stability, vision, and direction of TFLUX. She came up with the idea of TFLUX out of frustration after a variety of unwelcoming experiences while navigating certain food and beverage spaces in her hometown. Through TFLUX she enjoys meeting and collaborating with other Black/POC women in the beverage industry, supporting producers of color, and educating consumers according to their taste palate. Shes an arts administrator at Berklee College of Music and enjoys traveling, visiting museums, and eating her way through Boston.Charlene is responsible for the operations and strategic vision of TFLUX. She works closely with the owner/founder to build and curate the framework of all components that relate to the business and also works on external partnerships with vendors and sponsors. During her free time Charlene can be found searching for the next best book to read and managing her own consulting business.Suhayl lives for pleasures great and small and everything in-between. Ever the super-connector, she serves as the bridge between TFLUX and the hospitality industry connecting the very best food, wine, beer and spirits to the TFLUX experience. In her 5 to 9 and beyond she can be found chasing street art, enjoying a fine cigar, geeking out on how chocolate is made, or seeking out the best oysters to shuck by the water.Follow Tfluxe:http://www.tfluxe.com/https://www.instagram.com/tfluxe/Follow The Swirl Suite:@SwirlSuitewww.swirlsuite.comSarita @VineMeUpTanisha @GirlMeetsGlassLeslie @Vino301Glynis @Vino_NoireSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/SwirlSuite. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.Check out the highly anticipated podcast app that's created for the black community. The ALIVE Podcast App is the home of Black voices - where community, culture, and creatives live.
Ty-Juana is a consumer who fell in love with building community over a beverage and she's responsible for the growth, stability, vision, and direction of TFLUXÈ. She came up with the idea of TFLUXÈ out of frustration after a variety of unwelcoming experiences while navigating certain food and beverage spaces in her hometown. Through TFLUXÈ she enjoys meeting and collaborating with other Black/POC women in the beverage industry, supporting producers of color, and educating consumers according to their taste palate. She's an arts administrator at Berklee College of Music and enjoys traveling, visiting museums, and eating her way through Boston.Charlene is responsible for the operations and strategic vision of TFLUXÈ. She works closely with the owner/founder to build and curate the framework of all components that relate to the business and also works on external partnerships with vendors and sponsors. During her free time Charlene can be found searching for the next best book to read and managing her own consulting business.Suhayl lives for pleasures great and small and everything in-between. Ever the super-connector, she serves as the bridge between TFLUXÈ and the hospitality industry connecting the very best food, wine, beer and spirits to the TFLUXÉ experience. In her 5 to 9 and beyond she can be found chasing street art, enjoying a fine cigar, geeking out on how chocolate is made, or seeking out the best oysters to shuck by the water.Follow Tfluxe:http://www.tfluxe.com/https://www.instagram.com/tfluxe/Follow The Swirl Suite:@SwirlSuitewww.swirlsuite.com Sarita @VineMeUpTanisha @GirlMeetsGlassLeslie @Vino301Glynis @Vino_NoireSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/SwirlSuite. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Hey, magical folx! In this episode we discuss Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, which is *NOT* YA. We gotta say this at the top because its some sexist bs that women/femme adult fantasy writers get miscategorized as YA (read about how sexism impacts genre categorization). *Call to action* This fortnight, we're urging our magical community to learn more about abolishing borders, abolishing ICE and migrant justice as well as to support organizations doing this work. Watch/listen to the final plenary from this year's Allied Media Conference, “From Dreams to Practice: Abolition in Our Lifetimes”. The panel features a TON of rad ppl doing abolitionist work, including Miski Noor, Tawana “Honeycomb” Petty, Andrea Ritchie, Toni-Michelle Williams, Mariame Kaba and Rachel Herzing. Check out their work and learn learn learn and act act act [Note: I (K) attended the AMC virtually and I was BLOWN AWAY by the wisdom shared. Cannot recommend enough] Check out Harsha Walia's Ted Talk “A World Without State Borders”. Her book Undoing Border Imperialism is definitely on my TBR! Abolish ICE Denver is just one of the groups doing the work. They have an encampment outside of the Aurora ICE detention facility run by the for-profit prison company GEO Group. Check out their instagram for updates and action items. And donate if you can! **This isn't an exhaustive list! Please do research for your local area and share with us any resources you find in your journey. We will share those on Instagram and Twitter. We are often posting resources on social media as well, so check that out, too! Additionally, if you get a chance and are able, please consider becoming a patron on Patreon to get episodes early, access to our discord, and more. Or you can make a one time donation on ko-fi. Support feminist media, ppl!
Kym is a writer, speaker & Co-Founder of The Triple Cripples - a platform centering the narratives of Black & non-Black POC, living with disabilities. Home for Kym is London. Her word of the day is Anamorphosis. #AnthemsHome is a collection of original pieces about our lived experiences throughout this time, written and voiced by people from all over the world. It was created, executive produced and sound designed by Hana Walker-Brown with producer Bea Duncan. The artwork is by Mars West.
Today's episode we have a great chat with Mita Mallick, who's Head of Diversity & Inclusion and Cross-Cultural Marketing at Unilever. Mita talks about how she got her start and how to lead with culture in mind. We have a deep conversation on what it means to be an ally, especially, when you're a non-Black POC. She shares a deeply personal story about what it means when people don't step up for their colleagues and what it means when they do. Find her here:https://www.linkedin.com/in/mita-mallick-2b165822/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-reset-podcast/support
Everyone has a role in the movement for Black liberation. Black people, non-Black POC, allies, white people, other movements, organizations, our elected officials, and our world leaders. Racial justice is climate justice. We cannot continue to operate from an extractive lens in our movement and personal lives, as it's that extractive lens that has created the fossil fuel industry and oppressive political and societal structures we fight against.
This conversation aims to bring together non-Black people of color to examine and dismantle ways in which non-Black POC communities may be complicit in anti-Black racism.
AirGo introduces The Abolition Suite, a month of episodes focusing on police and prison abolition, with this episode featuring AirGo fave Asha Ransby-Sporn. Asha and the guys talk about the upcoming Defund CPD Mass Resistance Trainings over Fourth of July weekend (https://actionnetwork.org/events/defund-cpd-mass-resistance-trainings), and go through the 11 demands of the Black Abolitionist Network and the DefundCPD campaign. NOTE: The 7/4 and 7/5 trainings are for Black people only. White and non-Black POC folks can sign up for the 7/3 training. Sign up HERE: https://actionnetwork.org/events/defund-cpd-mass-resistance-trainings Can't make the training? Sign on to demand the defunding of CPD HERE: https://actionnetwork.org/forms/sign-on-to-demand-defunding-of-the-chicago-police-department This series of trainings is hosted by the Black Abolitionist Network as apart of the campaign to Defund CPD. Feel free to contact BAN at blackabolitionistnetwork@gmail.com with any accessibility needs or other concerns. Recorded 6/25 in Chicago Music from this week's show: Song 33 - Noname I Can See It - Darksunn
The world is currently transitioning and this is the perfect time to have these uncomfortable conversations. Back in 2011 after graduating with a Fashion Promotion BA(Hons), I landed an internship with a well known Fashion Public Relations company. I left after almost 3 years because of the subtle racism in that space.The lack of diversity and opportunity within the fashion department drove me away 9 years but after a catch up with an old colleague of mine who stayed there after I left, confirmed that lack of diversity and opportunity remained the same ( She is no longer there and Yes, she is black) So you can imagine my horror!! When said company posted a #BlackLivesMatter on their social media platforms. Yes, Black Lives Matter and Yes, we want everyone to stand behind this as this is the only way a change will come. HOWEVER!! Saying this while not practicing is a slap on every Black/POC employee and interns who have ever stepped in that building. I am not speaking on behalf of anyone else, these views are ALL my own and this is my PERSONAL account of my experience working in that toxic environment. Why now!? As I said, the world is transitioning, and if not today then when? When will we make these Fashion companies accountable for their behaviours? The lack of diversity and opportunity for Black people within these big Fashion companies needs to be addressed. If my voice is not loud enough, please encourage those with bigger platforms to speak. Hope you enjoy and please continue to stay safe during this difficult time ladies! Be part of the After25podcast community on IG: @after25podcast Please don't forget to Rate, Subscribe & Review the podcast on Apple. Thank you for taking the time to listen and please Share your thoughts on todays show. Follow me: @theashafundi See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
At the time of this podcast, North America is seeing a large number of resistance uprisings in response to the continued police violence against Black people. In light of these events, this week, we are joined by Reakash Walters to talk about anti-Black racism in the U.S. and Canada. Reakash is a community organizer and articling student who works tirelessly to spread awareness about anti-Black racism here in Canada and to spark change within her field. In this podcast episode, we cover a variety of topics, including Reakash's work in the legal field and career ambitions, how she personally feels about the recent increase in attention that the Black Lives Matter movement has gotten, the existence of anti-Black Racism and police brutality in Canada, our thoughts on 'Black Out Tuesday', how we feel about white and non-Black POC friends/companies suddenly reaching out to us, and whether her self-care routine has been impacted by recent events. For additional information about police brutality in Canada, check out the following resources and articles provided by Reakash: https://www.blmyeg.com/news/defund-eps-letter-template & https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform-custom/deadly-force & https://www.pyriscence.ca/home/2020/5/29/cdnpolice. You can also follow her on twitter at @Reakash.
Gwen reflects on the social unrest and #blacklivesmatter protests taking place around the world over the past two weeks and challenges everyone to gain a deeper understanding of the global phenomenon of anti-Blackness. Gwen breaks down why African-Americans should be proud of sparking this movement of consciousness and why Black people and allies worldwide need to ensure that all countries check their own behaviors and systematic racism, oppression and white supremacy. Gwen challenges white and non-Black POC allies to go beyond superficial social media posts and throwing money at charities. To be a true ally and effect change, white and non-Black POC allies must put themselves on the line and be uncomfortable to hold their peers, family, friends, associates and leaders accountable for checking their biases, treating Black people fairly and leveling the playing field.
In this episode, we speak with NYU student Derin Lawal about the current nationwide protests, George Floyd's death, and the Black Lives Matter movement at large. While we covered a lot, this one hour does not and cannot encompass all dimensions of the Black Lives Matter movement. This is one of many conversations we all need to have that addresses and dissects institutionalized racism, police brutality, anti-Blackness in white and non-Black POC communities, the role of social media, and so much more. There needs to be persistent, long term change, action, and dialogue, and we cannot allow any of it to slow down or stop. We stand with the Black community and we will continue using our platform to listen to, amplify, and champion Black voices. To our non-Black listeners, we hope this episode incites you into starting or continuing to have dynamic conversations with your friends and family that then translates into direct action. Educate yourselves, and listen to and support the Black community in every way you can. In our Instagram bio (@official.passion.project), we have added a bevy of resources to our Linktree for Black-owned businesses and bailfunds listeners can donate to, educational links for non-Black people, protest safety tips, and other ways to get active online and offline. Disclaimer: this episode was recorded on May 31st. We recognize that a lot has changed across the United States in such a short amount of time, and know that this will continue to be the case moving forward. Let's work with the Black community to create change.
More thoughts about this week: why the most important thing you can do right now is to hear the voices of people experiencing racism.why the response ALL Lives Matter is hurtful.why change has to start at home with you and what you might want to consider.Resources:For kids: https://www.prettygooddesign.org/blog/Blog%20Post%20Title%20One-5new4Other Podcasts:Code Switch, The Stoop, In The Light with Dr. Anita Phillips
Queen & J. are two womanist race nerds talking liberation, politics, and pop-culture over tea. Drink up! On this episode… The country is on fire, celebrities are talking out of turn instead of turning to their local organizers, ni**as is moving to Ghana, white protesters are centering themselves, and we are not ok This week’s hotlist - Support protestors, Insecure gave us love, Queering The Curve, support a bailout fund, sharing on social with caution, opting in vs being accosted by news, the illusion of freedom, our ain’t sh*t friends, white liberals are not ok, your non-Black POC friends think you’re lying, property over people, the good and bad of white protesters, why NYC is different, are businesses pandering? Obama the magical negro, Black celebrities vs everyday Black sh*t, who are your local community organizers, social media for white gaze, leave us alone, move to Ghana, send us a post card and mad other ish. Tweet us while you listen! #teawithqj @teawithqj and add #podin on twitter to help others discover Tea with Queen and J. podcast! SAVE THE DATE: JUNETEEN VIRTUAL KICKBACK, Friday June 19th, 9-11pm RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/juneteenth-virtual-kickback-tickets-108997289828 Black Girl show and tell submissions closed WEBSITE www.TeaWithQueenAndJ.com SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter: twitter.com/teawithqj Instagram: Instagram.com/teawithqj Facebook: www.facebook.com/TeawithQueenandJ Tumblr: teawithqueenandj.tumblr.com SPONSOR Teas By G Website: https://www.teasbyg.com IG: @teasbyg https://www.instagram.com/teasbyg/ EMAIL & SPONSOR INQUIRIES teawithqueenandj@gmail.com DONATE www.paypal.me/teawithqj OR www.patreon.com/teawithqj Queen’s Amazon wishlist: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/CXV9ZDWZ3PP9?ref_=wl_share J.’s Amazon wishlist: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/1NP09USMPJ0TB?ref=cm_sw_em_r_wl_ip_VEVWdvdDDemm0 NOTES AND EXTRA TEA Queering the Curve resource list: https://nonprofit393766031.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/queering-the-curve-2.pdf Where to Donate Your Money and Time to Help Protestors: https://nyulocal.com/where-to-donate-your-money-and-time-to-help-protesters-ef2727d7a9d2 Metal Health/ wellness resources FamilyCare, CommunityCare and SelfCare Tool Kit By the Association of Black pyschologist: http://www.abpsi.org/pdf/FamilyCommunitySelfCareToolKit.pdf Surviving & ResistingHate:A Toolkit For People of Color: https://icrace.files.wordpress.com/2017/09/icrace-toolkit-for-poc.pdf Black Lives Matter Meditation for Healing Racial Trauma: http://drcandicenicole.com/2016/07/black-lives-matter-meditation/ Therapy for Black Girls: https://therapyforblackgirls.com This week’s closing clip features Jay Versace: https://twitter.com/jayversace/status/1204649823246274560?s=21 This episode was created, hosted and produced by Naima & Janicia Libations to our friend’s Domingo, Tokunbo, and D. Sindayiganza who help keep this show running by paying and supporting Black women. Libations to Ohene Cornelius for our show intro, keep up with him at https://ohenecornelius.com
In this episode, we shed light on the mistreatment Africans are currently facing in China during this pandemic. We also address the blatant anti-blackness present in Asian communities and how anti-blackness is a global phenomenon. Is POC solidarity achievable? Or is it just a myth? We cover it all, in our first social distancing episode! Dans cet épisode, nous faisons la lumière sur les mauvais traitements que subissent actuellement les Africains en Chine durant cette pandémie. Nous abordons également la négrophobie flagrante présente dans les communautés asiatiques et parlons dufait que ce n'est pas exclusif à la Chine mais la négrophobie est un phénomène mondial. La solidarité entre personnes de couleur est-elle réalisable ? Ou est-ce juste un mythe ? Nous couvrons tout, dans ce premier épisode en distanciation sociale !
Trae Holiday sits down with Langston Hughes Programs Director Jazmyn Scott for a discussion about the importance of Langston Hughes to the community and Black culture and history in the Pacific Northwest as a whole. They also discuss the upcoming A.C.T.I.O.N youth acting classes that are launching on January 22nd. -------------------------------------- LANGSTON and Nu Black Arts West Theater Present: A.C.T.I.O.N. - Acting Communally Together in Our Neighborhood We are pleased to offer beginner and advanced classes for Black/POC middle and high school students, to learn the basics of acting with known acting coaches who will guide them through the creation of their own content focusing on social justice issues that matter to them. At the conclusion of the program, the students will perform their work on the historic Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute stage for their families and the community. Save the date - Saturday June 6, 2020! A.C.T.I.O.N. aims to ensure that our youth have access to the arts and to show the world the talent that Seattle has to offer! ***The program will be held weekly on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 3-6pm; from January 22nd through June 5th and final performance on June 6th.*** COST: $70 per week, $200 per month Feb-May (pay weekly rate in January and June) OR, Save $380 by registering for the entire 20-week session for $1,020! CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/action-a...
This message is brought to you by the realest! Viewer Discretion is advised. Brussels as the new European capital for modern art? Fake news? Well regardless, do we even go to museums and galleries? This week we talk about Black/POC life in terms of city/rural divide. Is the city the only place we can go? We talk about the narratives we chase of having to live in cities to live a livable life and forget our sistren we leave in the country. It's a bit of a brain drain of rural life to seek community in the cities. Maybaby goes full country bumpkin and advocates for a life in nature, something we are continuously deprived of in cities! Then we get on THIRD SPACES. Third spaces are outside of domestic and work life. Where do we go? How do we feel inside these third spaces? Can we feel comfortable in third spaces (museums for instance) that aren't owned by us? We flow question on question and have some illuminating finds on our lil convo. And never forget to moisturize in these cold months!!!
Happy Holidays and Best Wishes for the New Year to all of our "stalwart" listeners and AFROnerdists! Check out our last Grindhouse podcast for 2019 airing tonight at 6pm eastern. Tonight's show is a pretty simple one......your loyal podcasters will be discussing the "Year in Review" especially as it concerns black pop, science fiction, politics and blerd culture (i.e. Jordan Peele's US/Twilight Zone remix; Watchmen, the growing popularity of Black/POC comic conventions, TRUMP, comic books, Black Superman possibilities, Queen & Slim and Afropunk festival controversies,streaming vs conventional cinema, The Mandalorian etc) as well as forthcoming 2020 projects/issues- Terry Crews' John Henry, Andre 3000's AMC spy thriller series, Dispatches From Elsewhere and the upcoming Lovecraft Country and Picard TV projects. Call LIVE at 646-915-9620.
Part sound art, part creative critical discourse, American Chameleon is a conversation based podcast hosted by performance artist, poet, and curator jaamil olawale kosoko. It centers around the idea of the artist as a chameleon––someone who shapeshifts in order to survive in the world––not only in response to the environment, but also in response to the past, their inner selves, and imaginations of the future. The project began as a way to capture and archive the critical (but often invisible) conversations Jaamil was already having with fellow Black/POC artists, scholars, and activists during the development processes of his newest performance work. In the show, we explore how these subjects exemplify the chameleonic figure who moves between cultures, mediums, and projected identities. The writers and activists come from a number of places around the world and work in a surprising number of creative genres. They include former U.S. Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith, choreographer Miguel Gutierrez, performance artists Ima Iduozee and mayfield brooks, sound designer and composer Everett Asis-Saunders, writer Season Butler, and curator and scholar Joy Kristin Kalu. Conversations, interwoven with reading excerpts and experimental sound art, dive into the rich complexities of grief, the ways in which identity forms or emerges out of one’s creative practice, and how history, politics, and personal narratives shape the work contemporary global thought leaders create.
Hi Swallowerz, this week we cover: The new singing sensation Kylie Jenner, Atatiana Jefferson murdered by the hands on police in her own home, Pastor David Wilson got some ‘splanin but I see he’s eating well, Bill Porter is winning and y’all mad, Frank Ocean PrEP party full of straight and white folks and Azealia Banks told our dumb asses to stop taking PrEP... the person deserving of head this week is: Gabrielle Union. Topic of the day: POC vs Black. Non-Black People of Color stay in your lane...
To celebrate our one year anniversary of Black Gals Livin we are having a dinner at Vapianos in London on 3rd Oct - you want to come DM us and we will share more info x Jas and Vic are back with another episode to bless the start of your week and we have made it to episode 50 woop woop. We talk about the new Power show, that everyone seems to hate but Jas and Ex Love Island star Anna and her sister moving absolutely mad and the awkwardness of getting up for someone who isn't pregnant on the train. HOSTS: Vic @victoriasanusi Jas @jas_bw Let us know who you would like to see on an upcoming episode using the hashtag #blackgalslivin Artwork by @thecamru
Warning: this is a rant! Your favorite lesbian talks about Gina Rodriguez, intersectionality, and why Black & POC aren't synonyms. * * * Black Radical Queer Podcast Hosted by: Jhavia Nicole Produced & Edited by: Sharmane Johnson Music by: Publicity * * * Connect with us on Twitter, Instagram, & Facebook @BlkRadQwr Get you BLK RAD QWR T-shirts at Teespring.com/BlkRadQwr Ask a question, leave a promo, or just say hi at 937-601-8647! * * * This is a ManeHustle Media Podcast. ManeHustle Media, turn your side hustle into your ManeHustle.
Branding, social media, and impact oh my! Whether you're an entrepreneur, a creative, or an athlete you are your BRAND and if you want to have an impact you have to start thinking that way. Shadé Y. Adu joins me for this brilliant discussion on branding for Black & POC creatives, making money so you can have impact, and the 3 major challenges for Black women entrepreneurs. Shadé Y. Adu is a Digital Brand Strategist, International Speaker, Bestselling Author and the Founder of Savvy Solutions Consulting. Shadé helps women entrepreneurs use the power of social media to brand, build, and monetize digital programs, products, and services. She provides transformational tips, tool, strategies, and techniques that turn entrepreneurial leaders into online celebrities by leveraging the power of social media and live streaming. Shadé is a featured expert in Hello Beautiful, Black Enterprise, HuffPost, and the Rachael Ray Show. Shadé has shared her life-changing message in Europe, Asia, Africa, and across the United States. In addition to being a full-time entrepreneur, Shadé is a doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the recipient of the prestigious Gates Millennium Scholarship. With a sincere passion for her line of work and a tenacious drive to succeed, Shadé strives to make even more colossal changes in the world around her. Connect with Shadé at: Instagram/Twitter: @FutureDrShade Facebook Group: BreakfastBranding.com Freegiftfromshade.com Video version and show notes for this episode at: www.kristiniris.com/podcast008 Get your free Create Your Future Vision workbook & video guide at www.kristiniris.com/vision
AAVE=African American Vernacular English POC= People of Color This Episode could have had a couple of names: No one wins when veiled anti-blackness among non black POC is a proxy for solidarity no one wins when you use AAVE and you're not black: the anti blackness of non black POC no one wins when you're neither black nor really my family so don't call me sis: POC and anti blackness this episode is onfleeklitbrosishomie Everybody wanna be black til it's time to dismantle white supremacy Both vilified and stolen, black folks aren't the only ones benefitting from black linguistic and cultural production. Get into 20 minutes of outtakes at the end...this episode could have also gone on for hours. We're taking this baby on the road! New Orleans, we aren't like Drake, come fuck wit us at the Ace Hotel for a LIVE recording of Hoodrat to Headwrap for our Toxic Masculinity Episode on Sunday, September 2nd from 1pm-3pm as part of the CAKE series. For more info visit: https://www.acehotel.com/calendar/neworleans/blazelikefyre-presents-hoodrat-headwrap-live-erick-hart-ebony-donnley @AceNewOrleans on Twitter Facebook: facebook.com/threekeysnola facebook.com/acehotelneworleans; and Instagram: @ThreeKeysNola @BLAZELIKEFYRE @AceNewOrleans. Recommended Reading: That the Blood Stay Pure by Arica L. Coleman: http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/product_info.php?products_id=806959 More information on Pleasure Chest Sex Stores Workers' Struggle to Unionize: www.liberationnews.org/for-pride-thi…nt-on-strike/ Episode sponsored by you and the Pleasure Chest
In Episode 21 of Black Girl Squee, hosts Inda Lauryn and Didi Jenning squee about casting news for Tessa Thompson, Nicole Beharie and Pearlie Mack. They tell a group of intruding Marvel fangirls and some anti-Black POC to Catch the Fade. They also talk to Ariel, co-host of the Bad Fat Broads podcast about body shape diversity in magazines and fashion lines as well as the difference between body positivity and fat activism. Intro/Outro is "Fat Girls" by Briki Fa President feat. Ninene. Contact us on Twitter: @blackgirlsquee @indascorner @dustdaughter Tumblr: blackgirlsquee.tumblr.com Email: blackgirlsquee@gmail.com iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/black-girl-squees-podcast/id1029727623?mt=2 Google Play Podcasts: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Iwhybxfjgk37lrxx4hdbp5zo5sy
Episode 8!!!! This week, Black Girl Dangerous Mia McKenzie and guests Jamie Nesbitt Golden and Cate Young discuss Patti's Pies, Empire, why white women don't need to have opinions on how Black women celebrate each other, Aziz Ansari's new show and non-Black PoC f*ckery!