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Registered psychologist, longtime activist and Edmonton icon Liz Massiah chats with Trudy and Lisa about helping friends & community members talk about trauma, the gay and lesbian community in Edmonton in the 80s, where 2SLGBTQ+ rights are today — and what allies can do to defend the community. Read our blog: CroneCast.caShare your questions and comments at cronecast.ca/contact. We want to hear from you about all things crone.--From This Episode-- 1. Rule, Jane. (1985) A Hot-Eyed Moderate. Naiad Pr. Tallahassee, USA. (00:32) - Highlighting New Voices (07:52) - Introducing Liz Massaiah (11:51) - Invisibility and Women Over 50 (16:48) - Aging in the Lesbian Community (21:17) - Politics is Like Housework (24:08) - Allies All Around Us (28:45) - Through Uncertainty to New Possibilities (30:18) - Supporting Traumatized People (33:52) - Coming Out and the Trauma of the Closet (40:01) - Be Curious, Not Judgemental --Credits-- Hosted by Trudy Callaghan and Lisa Austin Produced by Odvod MediaAudio Engineering by Steve GlenOriginal music by Darrin Hagen
As a young architectural historian in San Francisco, Shayne Watson would take lunchtime walks near her office, pondering how and where the city's lesbian history took shape. She discovered that one of the earliest lesbian bars once stood right up the street in North Beach, a neighborhood that served as the birthplace of the city's lesbian community—though you'd never know it just by looking. After earning her USC master's degree in 2009, Shayne decided to do something about underrecognized LGBTQ history in San Francisco. She never looked back and is now a national leader in LGBTQ preservation.Producer Willa Seidenberg took a walk with Shayne in North Beach to see some sites from her thesis, Preserving the Tangible Remains of San Francisco's Lesbian Community in North Beach, 1933 to 1960. They discuss the neighborhood's roots in tourism, its transformation after Prohibition, and its uncertain fate in the face of the affordable housing crisis.Photos, links, and transcript on episode pageConnect with us on Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn!
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.widerlenspod.comThe trend of transitioning among gender-nonconforming individuals, particularly those who may have previously identified as lesbians, has been detrimental to the cohesion and stability of the lesbian community. Lesbians are faced with pressure to conform to certain expectations and navigate the complexities of identity politics within the LGBTQ+ community. This challenging position requires balancing their own identity, preferences, and sense of camaraderie with the broader push for inclusivity and acceptance of trans individuals.In this bonus episode for premium subscribers, Arielle Isaac Norman reflects about the evolving dynamics within the lesbian community, especially in relation to the inclusion of trans individuals and the shifting definitions of gender and sexual orientation.Watch our full length episode with Arielle Isaac Norman: https://www.widerlenspod.com/p/episode-172For instructions on setting up a private feed to listen to our premium content in your favorite podcast app, visit https://support.substack.com/hc/en-us/articles/4519588148244-How-do-I-listen-to-episodes-on-my-podcast-app
In this episode, India sits down with Regina Evans to openly discuss toxic masculinity within the lesbian community. Regina brings an openly refreshing perspective on this topic and the hope is that this episode will begin an open-minded dialogue about what trauma looks like, the dynamic of stud identity, and signs of abuse among lesbian relationships.
Today Emily and Rachel sit down to try and figure out what type of lesbians they are. What should have been a fun quirky quiz quickly turns into hurt feelings, self discovery, and a chilling queer confession from Rachel herself. Thank you to SKIMS for sponsoring this episode: Visit skims.com to try out their incredible line of underwear, loungewear, and shapewear! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Q&A - We had some amazing listener questions including, Carris's experience at bible college, talking about "Fatphobia" within the Lesbian Community, and staying in Het Marriage when you've realised you're gay! And many many more.Our final Episode of the season and we can't wait to get recording on season TWO of God to Gay!As always please remember to rate, like, follow and share this podcast wherever you're listening!You can contact us on Insatgram @godtogay or via email at godtogay@gmail.comWe love hearing from you and love to hear any episode/topic ideas for future podcast!-Lauren and Carris
Gay Fox News Contributor Tammy Bruce Blasts Corporate Pride Campaigns: ‘Really Do Damage to Gay and Lesbian Community'. LA Dodgers now promote 'Christian Faith and Family Day,' even as controversy regarding anti-Christian drag queens lingers: 'We are grateful for the opportunity to talk about Jesus' Why are companies committing corporate suicide to promote transgenderism? Bud Light sponsors Cincinnati Pride Parade after Dylan Mulvaney controversy Target gave $2.1M to LGBTQ group that urges schools to hide kids' gender transitions from parents Target and the LA Dodgers put Budweiser to shame tammy bruce,Cincinnati Pride Parade,GLSEN, sam briton, DAILY NEWS, LIBERTARIAN, INDEPENDENT NEWS, COMMENTARY, DAILY, Christine Anderson, Josh Alexander, Bibles, Lauren Chen, Benny Johnson, Tucker Carlson, Ian Miles Cheong, @clownworld, Jesse Kelly,zero-bail, sian longthorpe,rolling stone, Walmart boycott, bishop barro, Melissa McCarthy,brian Cornell,elon musk,
“The lesbian community, as far as I was concerned, ran the town.”That's a quote from Judy Goldstein's oral history interview with the Eugene Lesbian History Project. The project uses first-person testimonies from Goldstein and more than 80 other volunteers to document the city's lesbian community from roughly the 1960s to the 1990s. It's also on display in a new exhibit at the University of Oregon's Museum of Natural and Cultural History. Goldstein and project director Judith Raiskin join us to talk about the history of Eugene's lesbian community and why it's important to document these stories now.
In this episode of High Theory, Jack Jen Gieseking tells us about queer space. Queer geographies matter alongside queer temporalities. And it turns out that lesbian life in the 1950s cannot be generalized from the specific history of Buffalo, New York. In the episode they reference a number of scholarly books including J. Jack Halberstam, In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives (NYU Press, 2005); Elizabeth Freeman, Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories (Duke UP, 2010); Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis, Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community (Routledge, 1993); Mairead Sullivan, Lesbian Death: Desire and Danger between Feminist and Queer (Minnesota UP, 2022); Henri Lefebre, The Production of Space (La production de l'espace, Editions Anthropos, 1974, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith, Blackwell, 1919). He also names a number of scholars, including the geographer Gill Valentine, the historian David Harvey, and cultural anthropologist Gayle Rubin, and the 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality. Jack Jen Gieseking is a Research Fellow at the Five College Women's Studies Research Center. Their book A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers was published by NYU Press in 2020, and has a companion website called An Everyday Queer New York. They are working on a new book called Dyke Bars*: Queer Spaces for the End Times that uses the trans asterisk to invite consideration of queer spaces not historically claimed as dyke bars. Image: “Last Lesbian Bars in New York City” © 2023 Saronik Bosu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/gender-studies
In this episode of High Theory, Jack Jen Gieseking tells us about queer space. Queer geographies matter alongside queer temporalities. And it turns out that lesbian life in the 1950s cannot be generalized from the specific history of Buffalo, New York. In the episode they reference a number of scholarly books including J. Jack Halberstam, In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives (NYU Press, 2005); Elizabeth Freeman, Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories (Duke UP, 2010); Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis, Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community (Routledge, 1993); Mairead Sullivan, Lesbian Death: Desire and Danger between Feminist and Queer (Minnesota UP, 2022); Henri Lefebre, The Production of Space (La production de l'espace, Editions Anthropos, 1974, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith, Blackwell, 1919). He also names a number of scholars, including the geographer Gill Valentine, the historian David Harvey, and cultural anthropologist Gayle Rubin, and the 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality. Jack Jen Gieseking is a Research Fellow at the Five College Women's Studies Research Center. Their book A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers was published by NYU Press in 2020, and has a companion website called An Everyday Queer New York. They are working on a new book called Dyke Bars*: Queer Spaces for the End Times that uses the trans asterisk to invite consideration of queer spaces not historically claimed as dyke bars. Image: “Last Lesbian Bars in New York City” © 2023 Saronik Bosu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
In this episode of High Theory, Jack Jen Gieseking tells us about queer space. Queer geographies matter alongside queer temporalities. And it turns out that lesbian life in the 1950s cannot be generalized from the specific history of Buffalo, New York. In the episode they reference a number of scholarly books including J. Jack Halberstam, In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives (NYU Press, 2005); Elizabeth Freeman, Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories (Duke UP, 2010); Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis, Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community (Routledge, 1993); Mairead Sullivan, Lesbian Death: Desire and Danger between Feminist and Queer (Minnesota UP, 2022); Henri Lefebre, The Production of Space (La production de l'espace, Editions Anthropos, 1974, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith, Blackwell, 1919). He also names a number of scholars, including the geographer Gill Valentine, the historian David Harvey, and cultural anthropologist Gayle Rubin, and the 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality. Jack Jen Gieseking is a Research Fellow at the Five College Women's Studies Research Center. Their book A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers was published by NYU Press in 2020, and has a companion website called An Everyday Queer New York. They are working on a new book called Dyke Bars*: Queer Spaces for the End Times that uses the trans asterisk to invite consideration of queer spaces not historically claimed as dyke bars. Image: “Last Lesbian Bars in New York City” © 2023 Saronik Bosu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
In this episode of High Theory, Jack Jen Gieseking tells us about queer space. Queer geographies matter alongside queer temporalities. And it turns out that lesbian life in the 1950s cannot be generalized from the specific history of Buffalo, New York. In the episode they reference a number of scholarly books including J. Jack Halberstam, In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives (NYU Press, 2005); Elizabeth Freeman, Time Binds: Queer Temporalities, Queer Histories (Duke UP, 2010); Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis, Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community (Routledge, 1993); Mairead Sullivan, Lesbian Death: Desire and Danger between Feminist and Queer (Minnesota UP, 2022); Henri Lefebre, The Production of Space (La production de l'espace, Editions Anthropos, 1974, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith, Blackwell, 1919). He also names a number of scholars, including the geographer Gill Valentine, the historian David Harvey, and cultural anthropologist Gayle Rubin, and the 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality. Jack Jen Gieseking is a Research Fellow at the Five College Women's Studies Research Center. Their book A Queer New York: Geographies of Lesbians, Dykes, and Queers was published by NYU Press in 2020, and has a companion website called An Everyday Queer New York. They are working on a new book called Dyke Bars*: Queer Spaces for the End Times that uses the trans asterisk to invite consideration of queer spaces not historically claimed as dyke bars. Image: “Last Lesbian Bars in New York City” © 2023 Saronik Bosu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
All Serious Subjects is a podcast about the most serious subjects, such as presidential beauty pageants, laughing at farts, and squirrels convicted of fraud. The show's theme song, "All Sorts of Farts," is by The Fray's Ben Gibbard. Check it out below. You can also listen at the All S.E. podcast page. Join Adam and John as they laugh at gay jokes and farts. They also talk to a man who is a bit of a prat. The man has a lot to answer for. Adam is also joined by his friend who just moved to the city. This episode is brought to you by the folks at The Gay and Lesbian Community of Chicago. To support the show, visit allserioussubjects.com
Dr. Jane McElroy is a professor of family and community medicine at the University of Missouri. She specializes in LGBTQIA healthcare and spoke about how weight and weight loss can take on different significance in lesbian and bisexual communities.
Gouinement Lundi dédie une émission à la communauté lesbienne européenne et centre-asiatique, ou encore EL*C, une organisation internationale qui a pour but de fournir un… L'article Rencontre avec Silvia Casalino et Marame Kane de l'EuroCentralAsian Lesbian* Community (EL*C) est apparu en premier sur Gouinement lundi, podcast des lesbiennes, bies et trans, féministes.
How do pitch forks, a bunch of woman during apple harvest, and a LP vinyl cover make history? And what's it like to travel the world in the name of music and feminism?Meet Liza Cowan, an artist, former radio host, producer, magazine editor, and lesbian activist from New York City who lives to tell the tale. She happens to be the confidant and former partner of the late singer Alix Dobkin, who is also featured heavily in this episode. Listen in if you'd like to hear more about Liza's life, her roots in the lesbian feminist scene of the 1970s; what it was like to interview Yoko Ono for her radio show, and how it felt to fall in love 'on air'. Things mentioned in this Episode:Liza's Yoko Ono Interview; Alix Dobkin Obituary (Guardian); Gay Head Cliffs; Labyris Books NYC; Natalie Barney; Liza's WebsiteSend Jess a tip via her virtual TipJar to support the podcast :https://tpjr.us/alesbianaffairpodcast
The world of comics is as vast as it is diverse. From colorful, fanciful stories geared toward children to gritty, realistic artwork crafted for more a mature crowd, if it can be drawn, there's an audience for it. But what motivates an artist to pursue a particular style or genre? To put it another way: What draws them to it? Comic artist Barry Deutsch shares how he became passionate about cartooning, and why he creates comics about communities that are often overlooked and underserved.Lefty Cartoons, by Barry DeutschHereville: How Mirka Got Her Sword, by Barry DeutschHereville: How Mirka Met a Meteorite, by Barry DeutschHereville: How Mirka Caught a Fish, by Barry DeutschSuperButch, by Barry Deutsch & Becky HawkinsPogo (comic strip) - WikipediaMaking Movies, by Sidney Lumet“Nobody tells this to people who are beginners, I wish someone told me." - Ira GlassWill Eisner - WikipediaThe Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, by Michael ChabonA Contract with God, by Will EisnerMake 'Em Laugh, by Donald O'Connor from Singin' in the RainUnderstanding Comics: The Invisible Art, by Scott McCloudCarl Barks - WikipediaJaime Hernandez - WikipediaChester Brown - WikipediaIn the Blink of an Eye: A Perspective on Film Editing, by Walter MurchHoly Days: The World Of The Hasidic Family, by Lis HarrisRobert Rodriguez Had to Push Dimension for ‘Spy Kids' Family to Be Latino - IndieWireLove and Rockets, by Jaime, Mario & Gilbert HernandezUsagi Yojimbo, by Stan SakaiSmile, by Raina TelgemeierBoots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community, by Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy & Madeline D. DavisThe Essential Dykes To Watch Out For, by Alison BechdelFun Home: A Family Tragicomic, by Alison BechdelFiction or Qualified Immunity? - Lefty CartoonsHow City Budgets Work - Lefty CartoonsO How They Suffer - Lefty CartoonsThe Existence of Trains Debate - Lefty CartoonsThe Calvin and Hobbes Tenth Anniversary Book, by Bill WattersonWhat Racism Is(n't) About - Lefty CartoonsOil and Gas are So Cheap! - Lefty CartoonsWhite Lies (a sequel) - Lefty CartoonsReal America vs The Coastal Elites - Lefty CartoonsWe Mustn't Ruin HIS Life - Lefty CartoonsYoung StorytellersFollow Barry on Twitter: @barrydeutsch----------Email: wherewegopod@gmail.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Do you know the secret butch nod? In this delightful episode, Dr. Amy Tooth Murphy (Royal Holloway) teaches me about the nod, the queer double take, and all the other sources of queer joy butch lesbians encounter when they brave the streets. Amy lets us enter this magical dyke world via the medium of oral history and explains why queer interactions often remain invisible to straight folk, why it is important to study the butch outside of their natural habitat (the lesbian bar) and why a female flâneur can potentially revamp a problematic masc perspective. People, works and concepts mentioned: https://notchesblog.com/Murphy, Amy Tooth. "Butch on the streets: The butch flâneur and the queering of the city." Contentious Cities. Routledge, 2020. 149-159.Sally Munt Kennedy, Elizabeth Lapovsky, and Madeline D. Davis. Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community. Routledge, 1993.ZapCook, Matt. Queer Domesticities: Homosexuality and Home Life in Twentieth-Century London. Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.Flâneur*seCharles BaudelaireWalter BenjaminPalimpsestuousBound (1996) by the Wachowski sistersI butched it up for this one. Did you notice? Tell me on Twitter (@Lena_Mattheis) or on Instagram (@queerlitpodcast) and follow @AmyToothMurphy as well!Questions you should be able to respond to after listening:1. What is a butch? How does butchness intersect with fashion, gender and sexual identity?2. Why do some people criticize butch/femme dynamics and relationships? 3. Please look up historic examples of the ‘zaps' Amy mentions.4. What is a flâneur*se? Why is it a problematic concept? How can butch change that?5. What is oral history? How does Amy conduct research?6. Amy mentions several literary studies strategies and concepts that are useful in oral history. Which strategies are those?7. Which queer film scene do you rewind?
What's it like to spend a night in a jail in the US and still see the humour in it? And what does it take to stay friends with your ex and maybe even work with each other professionally? Meet Alice Frick and Lauren Karl who, in this episode, share insights about their careers in comedy and entertainment, talk about their autobiographic and cultural backgrounds, and deliberate on what it means to navigate differences and language barriers within the industry and community. Both also share their thoughts on the art of comedy and improv, what it takes to do magic on stage, and how to safely 'play with fire'.Things mentioned in this episode:Alice's Solo Show 'A Frickin' Crazy Year' (voucher code: ALesbianAffair - 50% off); 'Body Ritual among the Nacirema' by Horace Miner; Lauren's Youtube Channel - 'Just Veganin'; What The Frick?; Marina Abramović; Alice's Youtube ChannelSend Jess a tip via her virtual TipJar to support the podcast :https://tpjr.us/alesbianaffairpodcast
As part of the CKNW Leadership Series, we chat with Pat Hogan about her advocacy for Vancouver's lesbian community. Pat is also the founder of BOLDfest and previously the owner of Josephine's Cafe on Commercial Drive
First broadcast on September 17, 1985. Discussing the film "Before Stonewall the Making of a Gay and Lesbian Community" with author Reverend Grant Gallup and Chicago gay-friendly bar owner, Marge Summit
“Hate is just jealous disguised by love” No matter what we do or try to accomplish in life, we always have a hater lurking. If you've got a hater of your own, you're not alone. On this episode, we open up what we call... our hate mail. From body shaming to homophobic slurs..our STR8 Up crew opens up about situations that made them feel targeted and how they each handled them. It's a very personal episode you won't want to miss. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline suicidepreventionlifeline.org 800-273-8255
The story of a lesbian community that is situated in a remote village in Lesbos, Greece. Created in the 70s, it welcomed thousands of women before declining in the 2000s. Nowadays, the community is formed by older lesbians. But they are not your typical 60 year old women. They party, they have sex and they speak their minds. What they say about themselves is a precious testimony of a vanishing community that once changed so many women's lives.
Coming out in the 70s, Gaye made her way from Arizona to California to work in a non-traditional trade as an electrician. Now as an electrical inspector and part owner of AfterEllen, she addresses the changes in the lesbian community. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/beth-maples-bays/support
Lez be honest, it's about time we hear from our Lesbian Community. Today my guest, Sarah, tells us her coming out story and WOW it's freaking good. Sarah and I both attended the same church in Waco and both were part of an ~interesting~ group for those that “struggle with same sex attraction”. We talk about this experience, the @dirtyrottenchurchkids podcast, and so much more. If you'd like to talk with Sarah or let her know how cool she is, follow her Instagram @svelks. Stay tuned at the end of the episode to hear who our guest is next week!! Special thanks to our sponsor, Sacred Denver, for this episode. If you'd like to set up your first consultation, make sure to go to sacreddenver.com and follow on Instagram at @sacred_denver . Make sure to mention this podcast for 10% off all services and merchandise. As always, thank you Hunter Gorman for helping edit and produce these episodes, sorry for waking you up at odd hours of the night to ask for last minute edits. If you'd like to share your coming out story, please reach out to @jrue18 on Instagram. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jack-whyte2/support
On this week's episode, we dive into the LGBTQ+ community, specifically the Lesbian community, and any differences or similarities in dating culture in LA and Philly. Spoiler alert: there are WAY more similarities than differences seen on each coast. Guests Laurel (based in Philly) and Alaina (based in LA) join Ashley in discussing their experiences dating in the Lesbian community across a variety of topics, including using dating apps, navigating the bar scene, relationships vs hook-ups (has anyone heard of "the U-Haul??"), and using social media - both to slide into DMs and figure out who they should or should not date. They each share dating successes, like Alaina meeting her current girlfriend at a bar in downtown Huntington Beach, as well as major fails - like Laurel dumping a girl she was dating on Valentine's Day, only to be stuck in a shared Uber ride home with her across the city. Ashley also discusses how their experience compares to hers as a straight woman dating in Philly and LA - even though a guy asked if she was a lesbian just this weekend. Be prepared to laugh and learn a lot about the community this week! Find us on Instagram: @swipeeastswipewest Find us on TikTok: @ashdavi_ Like what you hear? Rate/Review/Subscribe!
See everything in more detail at these links:Women in the Life, Winter 2002Washington Free Press, April 26, 1967City Paper, April 15, 1988The Washington Blade, April 22, 1994Archive This Moment D.C. in Dig DCContribute to Archive This Moment D.C.
Love, fear, and women's music. They seemed to be ever present in Dr. Thea Iberall's life as she was coming out as a lesbian in the 1960s. She speaks with Phil and Alex about how women's music was “the original gaydar” and what her hopes are for the next generation of LGBTQ+ people.
*Poisyn Ivee & Poindexter discuss "uhauling" in the Lesbian Community.*
Thanks for listening to SkinFolk Podcast! In episode 38 we get into: Brandy Vs Monica Domestic Violence in the Lesbian Community Gender roles in LGBTQ relationships Tay and Jay debate the GOAT Girl Groups! Follow us on IG: SkinFolk.pod Thank you for listening! Stay Blessed and Stay Black!
In this episode of Coming Out Lesbian I talk with Kianna Vargas, an educator for 3rd graders and below about the importance of normalizing LGBTQ+ topics, gender expression and more at a young age. We discuss helpful parenting tips, what to do if your child comes out, or if you see signs that your child may be gay. Kianna and I also discuss helpful resources and tips if you see your child or someone else's child is being bullied.There are lots of resources for children and parents if you or someone you know is in need of guidance:http://pflag.org/https://www.thetrevorproject.orghttps://suicidepreventionlifeline.orghttps://lgbtqia.ucdavis.edu/support/hotlineshttps://ostem.org/page/crisis-hotlinesYou can get in touch with Kianna here!Have some thoughts or are in need of advice or guidance? Send us a DM on Instagram or send us an email to comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com! For more from ComingOutLesbian:Check out our websiteComingoutlesbian instagramLike us on Facebook!Stay up to date with us here!Coming Out Lesbian now has a Patreon! If you are a fan of the show consider supporting us and help keep this great queer community going, it would mean the world to me. Theres lots of great bonus content for you there to check out!
In this week's episode, we discuss another commonly asked question from followers and listeners. This week's episode is all about the differences between the labels Bisexual and Pansexual. Whether you are just now figuring yourself out or have been in the community for years this episode should help clarify and explain many misconceptions and confusion around the two seemingly identical words!Have some thoughts or definitions of your own for bisexual and pansexual? Send us a DM on Instagram or send us an email to (comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com) sharing yours! They may even get featured in an episode!For more from ComingOutLesbian:Comingoutlesbian instagramLike us on Facebook!Stay up to date with us here!For any questions, comments, or advice email us at: comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com
In this episode of Coming Out Lesbian we discuss some helpful tips and tricks to help make the coming out process easier. Whether this is your first or 100th time coming out there's sure to be something to help you, because lets be real, coming out of the closet isnt just a one time thing. So sit back and give a listen to my 10 favorite tips to help calm those coming out jitters!Have some coming out tips of your own? Send us a DM on Instagram or send us an email to (comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com) sharing yours! They may even get featured in an episode!For more from ComingOutLesbian:Comingoutlesbian instagramLike us on Facebook!Stay up to date with us here!For any questions, comments, or advice email us at: comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com
In this episode we discuss all about women in business, how to move your own business online and the struggles of starting a new business during Covid-19 with special guest, Livia Mastriani from Happy Leo Designs and HLD - Light! Livia is Chief Executive Optimist and Business Coach teaching Small Business Owners how to successfully pivot online and thrive. She is also owner of a clothing brand specifically designed for Tomboys. Livia can be found online here:Instagram: Happy.leo.designsInstagram: HLD.lightTomboy streetwearBusiness Coaching/ConsultingA huge thank you to Livia for coming on to share your stories!For more from ComingOutLesbian:Comingoutlesbian instagramLike us on Facebook!Stay up to date with us here!For any questions, comments, or advice email us at: comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com
This week's episode features special guest Jennifer Messina! Jennifer Messina is an active member in the LGBTQ+ community, a recording artist, and music performer! Jennifer is most well known for her hit "Time Heals Everything", a beautiful song that is out now on all major listening platforms! Be sure to check out Jen's YouTube channel as well for all of her music videos!In this episode Jennifer and I discuss the important and often difficult topic of internalized homophobia. She shares her dealings with it, growing up catholic, how she has learned to practice self-love and acceptance, and how she has overcome her struggles with internalized homophobia. This is a great episode for anyone who may be struggling with accepting themselves!Check out more of Jen here:Jen's instagram Jen's Youtube"Time Heals Everything" Music videoListen on SpotifyA huge thank you to Jen for coming on to share your stories!For more from ComingOutLesbian:Comingoutlesbian instagramLike us on Facebook!For any questions, comments, or advice email us at: comingoutlesbianpodcast@gmail.com
Navigating a queer life is tough enough as it is. What do you do if your parents are homophobic on top of things? This question gets sent to me a lot so I decided I would devote an episode to try to help out those in need of some advice on this very difficult topic. This episode touches on the topic of dealing with homophobic parents, how to test the waters to see if it's safe to come out to them, what to do if you are at risk of being disowned, and ways to plan to tell them.
Season 2 is here! Welcome back to everyone and hello new listeners! In this episode we are starting out with a very important topic, LGBTQ erasure in history. How it happens, why if happens, examples of people who have had their identities stripped and more! I provide various examples and discuss a few key points about what LGBTQ erasure is and provide ways we can work to prevent this from happening.
In this episode of Syxx Sense, we had the opportunity to talk about gay relationships, coming out and finding acceptance in Florida. A lesbian couple spoke candidly with Syxx Sense about their relationship and answered questions that some in the straight community may wonder, but don't have a chance to ask. The interview was impromptu, so the audio is a little off due to the voice recorder only capturing part of the interview. Subscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/syxxsense Check us out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/syxxsense Check out Dread Central: http://www.dreadcentral.com/author/kryten-syxx/
In 2004, Showtime gave audiences “The L Word,” and gave lesbians a cast of characters to love, hate, and lust after. Lesbians finally had a show they can ask, “Which character are you most like?” The legacy of the show is flawed with its lack of representation and a mysterious “whodunnit” series finale. Then in late 2019, fans rejoiced when Showtime premiered, “The L Word: Generation Q.” Fans of the original were given a chance to see how some of the original characters have changed in a decade and were introduced to a slew of multicultural, multi-identity cast of younger cast. How does the new show hold up? Why L Word character are Nicole and Rolando most like? Listen to find out. Shownotes Sasha Velour "Deceptacon" Lipsync - LINK Every "The L Word" Sex Scene Ranked - LINK Follow Us Be sure to follow us on social media for news, polls, and fun behind the scenes content. FACEBOOK: facebook.com/remakesrebootsrevivals INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/remakesrebootsrevivals And we always want to hear from you! Email us at remakesrebootsrevivals@gmail.com
[EPISODE] The Stonewall Uprising and the Lesbian Community A History of Activism & Engagement In our third and final show honoring the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, my guests will be author and educator Karla Jay, Flavia Rando, archivist and coordinator with the Lesbian Herstory Archives, and poet and artist Fran Winant. Segment 1 Jeff talks about Karla’s experience and her involvement in the lebsians and gay rights movement. In 1974, she worked for Pace University in the english department and she taught english as a second language. During 1984, Pace established their LGBTQ programs, which was started by Karla. The LGBTQ students created a program called doing with difference and they each counted the number of letters so the numbers can appear only in the letters and not in their transcript. They were afraid they wouldn't be accepted so they decided to keep their door closed during their program. Karla changed her name in 1969, as part of the women's movement and she didn’t like her last name because it reminded her of the Berlin Wall. Due to the Vietnam war, the students took over the Pace University building for about 10 days. The guys wanted the women to make food and sleep with them to get through there revolution. Since that situation occurred, Karla became a feminist. She joined the Red stockings, a feminist group that developed awareness about homosexuals. At first, she liked what the group did for lesbians, but later the group only focused on heterosexual woman, so Karla felt like she didn't fit in. Karla wants to organize a lesbian and bi organization in other schools so everyone can feel accepted. Segment 2 Jeff and Karla talk about the night of the stonewall uprising. Karla says she went to the second night of the stone wall to see what's happening and when she arrived everything was the same. On the door it stated “everyone cooperated with the police and go home” and she said everyone remained peaceful so she had no idea what was going on. In addition, Karla talks about GLF and when she met GLF it made her feel like she was home. She considers the Gay Liberation for Women family. She also joined the radical lesbians and later the action they took was called lavender mineses action. The Radical Lesbians and Gay Liberation For women became one big group. They created “women identify women’’ as a group effort to voice their opinion about gay rights. She joined other organizations, such as the Rat magazine, which was a counter cultural women magazine talking about the women's movement. Karla tried to make people happy in their own skin and wanted people to join her groups. Segment 3 Flavia Rando, an accomplished scholar and activist in queer activities and lesbian affairs and Fran Winant, an award winning poet and painter (Looking at Women (1971), Dyke Jacket (1976), and Goddess of Lesbian Dreams (1980)), join us on the show tonight. For many years Flavia ran an art editing business, but went back and got her graduate degree to start teaching after growing bored of her time as an editor. One of the elements of the lesbian revolution was the huge cultural renaissance and explosion of art in the community. Before stonewall lesbian life was an extremely difficult time laced with turmoil, abuse, and violence. Stonewall had a drastic and immediate improvement on the quality of lesbian life, as it gave way to incredible strides in the forming of communities and alliances and exposure of culture. The villages were both lesbian culture centers of New York producing art and culture. Moving up to Harlem we see the celebration of drag balls, though it is uncertain if women took roles in these balls. However, Harlem was another center of Lesbian activity.
If you like what we do then buy us a Ko-Fi Anchored by Faith: Religion & Spirituality in the Lesbian Community Coffee Break With KA & Dana: Meaningful Conversations From A Lesbian Perspective Roughly half of lesbians surveyed in a recent study reported no religious affiliation. In this episode, KA and Dana discuss religion and spirituality in the lesbian community. Topics covered include: religion vs. spirituality; reasons lesbians may choose to not become involved with organized religion; and, does the lack of religious affiliation mean that lesbians aren't spiritual? About the hosts KA is an author of lesbian fiction with degrees in counseling, psychology, and social work. She writes stories about lesbians, burdened by past trauma, who find healing in the love of a soul mate. Dana is an avid reader, a recovering alcoholic, a fisher-woman, and a graduate of the school of hard knocks. As co-hosts, they're quite the duo. Connect with them online at https://www.kamoll.com/ Music in this episode (Lucky Way) is licensed for use in various multimedia applications by Melody Loops.
Anchored by Faith: Religion & Spirituality in the Lesbian Community Coffee Break With KA & Dana: Meaningful Conversations From A Lesbian Perspective Roughly half of lesbians surveyed in a recent study reported no religious affiliation. In this episode, KA and Dana discuss religion and spirituality in the lesbian community. Topics covered include: religion vs. spirituality; reasons lesbians may choose to not become involved with organized religion; and, does the lack of religious affiliation mean that lesbians aren't spiritual? KA is an author of lesbian romance with degrees in counseling, psychology, and social work. Dana is an avid reader, a recovering alcoholic, a fisher-woman, and a graduate of the school of hard knocks. As co-hosts, they're quite the duo. Connect with them online at www.coffeebreakwithkaanddana.com. Follow them on Twitter at @Coffee_KA_Dana. Like them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/CoffeeBreakWithKAandDana.
This is part 2 of the series, "Marriage and the Alternative Lifestyle". We continue from last week the informtion concerning the Kingdom Culture of God as it pertains to culture of the Gay and Lesbian Community. We address in The spirit of love God's word concerning marriage while acknowledging the solution to our issues, Jesus Christ.
“Self Activity of Femmes: I like this clip because it shows femme women as searching out lesbian partners. They’re not passive in finding sexual partners. The actually seek them out and they are very important in the development of lesbian life and lesbian communities." - Elizabeth Kennedy For episode 10 we spoke to Elizabeth Kennedy about her interview with Ann from her research that went into creating "Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of A Lesbian Community.” We discuss butch/femme politics throughout history and the presence of racism and acceptance within the queer community in Buffalo, New York during the period of these interviews in the 1980’s. Look for our next episode with Marc Robert Stein, the creator of Philadelphia LGBT History Project. We will be speaking about his interviews with Anita Cornwell, a seminal American lesbian author who wrote the Black Lesbian in White America in 1983, and the intersections of race, class and geography discussed in her interview. Follow this channel for more great content! Please share, like, and send us feedback about the podcast. Here is the transcript of the clip section that was difficult to parse: Ann: I thought it was terrible that women went together. I talked about her like a dog. Oh hell yeah you couldn’t even convince me that there was anything right about that. I said it was ridiculous, terrible. She used to be my employee and I talked about her something terrible. But that same girl ended up seducing me but she used to get me drunk. Off that good Gordon Gin. Every time I went to her house we would just about kill a whole bottle and you know and they said I know something happened but I never knew what happened. And next time I came to her house she told me “You know I’m getting tired of these drunk actions from you” and I drank some more. Cause I would always get out of my mind I didn’t know what was going on cause I didn’t want… I was curious more than anything else. They always told me “lesbians will kill ya.” They were the wrong people to associate with. So I had a fear of lesbians because the first time I walked into a club in Cleveland, Ohio, this girl approached me in the ladies bathroom and demanded to kiss me and she scared me to death. And I didn’t want to kiss her and she grabbed the whiskey bottle like she was gonna hit me with it and another girl snatched her out of there. And that was my first encounter with a gay lady and that really scared me. I really thought they were crazy, she was drunk out of her mind, you know. And that same woman ended up killing a couple people though, really! She really did. She ended up committing murder. But it wasn’t women it was men she killed it was men. But that was the first gay lady I ever met and she really scared me. She was high in the bathroom, I don’t know what she had but she scared me to death. You know and I said, “Oh my god they’re really like that!” Elizabeth Kennedy: Just like your mother said!
“Coming from a time when women were still associated with the private sphere, those relationships would be felt as very private, but with the lesbian feminist generation, being very visible and saying this is my identity and creating community around that identity, moving from the private to the public sphere, it really changed how people felt about sexuality." - Nadine Boulay For episode 9 we spoke to Nadine Boulay about her interview with Christine and Robin, seminal figures in Vancouver queer activism in the 70’s and 80’s, family politics in the queer experience, and how the concept of sexuality has shifted over time. Look for our next episode with Liz Kennedy most famously known for co-authoring "Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of A Lesbian Community," which required a lot of oral interviewing of the the lesbian community in Buffalo, New York in the decades before Stonewall. We listen to one of her interviews from her research for that book and discuss the changing tides of feminism and queer politics. Follow this channel for more great content! Please share, like, and send us feedback about the podcast.
Different populations need different support and forms of treatment. Listen as Carol the Coach interviews Dr. Costine who is an expert at working within the lesbian population to treat love and sex addiction. She has done research to show how lesbians frequently "urge to merge" which creates specific relational behavoirs that lesbians suffer from. Her Book Lesbian Love Addiction:Understanding the Urge to Merge and How to Heal When Things Go Wrong is an excellent resource for the Lesbian Community or for psychotherapists working with lesbians in relational conflict.
In part seven of BLESS, Matt Adair preaches out of multiple texts.
Online Dating sites are built primarily around heterosexual relationships — including the personality evaluations and profile designers. Where does that leave the Gay and Lesbian Community who are looking for love, not “hook-ups” in the vain of Casual Encounters? In this episode, Charles welcomes Frank Mastronuzzi, founder and CEO of oneGoodLove.com, a dating/relationship site dedicated to happy, healthy gay … Read more about this episode...
Gold Star Lesbians Annette Gagnon and Jenoa Harlow are back with me to discuss more rules and roles within the Lesbian community. Specifically what degree of importance do the butch/femme roles play in the lesbian community and how the effects are felt by members of the community?
An exploration of STD's in the lesbian community.