POPULARITY
Town Hall: A Black Queer Podcast with Bob the Drag Queen & Peppermint
Welcome to "Town Hall: A Black Queer Podcast", where we embark on explorations of themes using storytelling, music, poetry, and art, blending depth with hilarity. In tribute to Black History Month, our latest episode marks the second installment of our two-part series on "Historical Icons & Activists". Join your hosts Bob and Peppermint as they dive deep into the profound legacy of queer Black icons from the annals of history. From the pioneering endeavors of Angela Davis to the impassioned activism of James Baldwin and the indomitable community leadership of Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, this episode promises a captivating odyssey through the lives and contributions of these remarkable figures. Tune in as we pay homage and celebrate the enduring voices that have left an indelible mark on Black and queer history. Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you're listening or by using this link: https://bit.ly/TownHallABlackQueerPodcast If you like the show, tell your friends! You can text, email, tweet, or send this link to a friend: https://bit.ly/TownHallABlackQueerPodcast Follow us on Instagram: @TheTownHallPod Learn more about Black Queer Town Hall: https://www.blackqueertownhall.org Special thanks to our Production Team: Executive Producer, Tracy Marquez. Senior Producer, Charlene Westbrook. Producer, Cory Nixon, and Post Producer, Amelia Ritthaler. Music by Lafemmebear. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Olá, novamente! Mais uma vez com um episódio super hiper mega caótico com ataques de riso à mistura. Pouco falámos de livros, como já é nosso costume, mas divagámos por alguns assuntos relativamente interessantes. Esperemos que também achem. Obrigada por nos continuarem a ouvir. Esperamos que gostem! LIVROS MENCIONADOS: Melancolia em Tempos de Perturbação, Joke J. Hermsen Kindred, Octavia E. Butler Miss Major Speaks, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy with Toshio Meronek Homegoing, Yaa Gyasi Ending the Pursuit: Asexuality, Aromanticism and Agender Identity, Michael Paramo
Grab your copy of Rainbow Parenting: Your Guide to Raising Queer Kids and Their Allies! Check out our Pride tour schedule! REGISTER FOR PRIDE-A-PALOOZA! Find Us Online - Queer Kid Stuff Website: https://www.queerkidstuff.com - Weekly Newsletter Signup: https://bit.ly/qksnewslettersignup - Patreon: patreon.com/queerkidstuff - Instagram: instagram.com/queerkidstuff - Twitter: twitter.com/queerkidstuff - Email: business@queerkidstuff.com Production - Host & Creator: Lindz Amer - Producer: Multitude - Editor: Mischa Stanton - Theme Music: Amanda D'Archangelis - Artwork: Abe Tensia About The Show Welcome to Rainbow Parenting, a queer- and gender-affirming parenting podcast. Every week, queer educator Lindz Amer starts conversations about the intimidating first steps on how to affirm queer, trans, and nonbinary kids. They talk to experts who explain how to approach age-relevant early childhood sex ed, queer kid lit, gender reveal parties, and much more. And this isn't just for parents; educators, caregivers, librarians, and anyone who knows, loves, and works with kids can start the process of raising a whole generation! New episodes of Season Three will drop Mondays and Fridays throughout June! Produced in partnership with Multitude.
Today we spotlight activist and icon Miss Major Griffin-Gracy and her leadership in the trans community.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Darcelle XV (Walter Cole), the world's oldest drag queen, died on March 23, 2023. She was 92. Since 1967, Darcelle has been performing and running the Portland drag venue, Darcelle XV Showplace, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2020. I had the opportunity to speak with Darcelle and her friend and collaborator, Poison Waters (Kevin Cook) a few weeks before her death. This is part of our special series, the LGBTQ+ Elders Project. You can listen to previous interviews with LGBTQ+ elders like Angela Davis, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, André De Shields, and Dr. Charles Silverstein. LGBTQ&A is hosted and produced by Jeffrey Masters. @jeffmasters1
TW: Mentions of Suicide and Violence Hey guys, Happy Black History month to all of you. This is the last episode of the series and I am so thankful for all of y'all who were part of this journey, Black history month is every month so we are not stopping here with the episodes, just the series. It has been amazing to do this series on black queer icons and I hope you all learned about someone new this month Today we are talking about the amazing Miss Major and all the work she did for prison reform and campaigning for black trans rights. We delve into her story and witness her journey from the beginning to the end, from incarceration to activism and her House of GG, we talk about all that and more in this episode. Trans rights are still crucial and under attack so please do your due diligence and Get Involved with your local agencies to stand for the much-needed change. Don't forget to rate our podcast and follow us on Spotify. We are posting an episode every Tuesday and Thursday at 10 am this month so you do not want to miss out. Socials: Instagram, Tiktok and Pintrest- @theamericanfuneral
TW: Mentions of Suicide and Violence Hey guys, Happy Black History month to all of you. This is the last episode of the series and I am so thankful for all of y'all who were part of this journey, Black history month is every month so we are not stopping here with the episodes, just the series. It has been amazing to do this series on black queer icons and I hope you all learned about someone new this month Today we are talking about the amazing Miss Major and all the work she did for prison reform and campaigning for black trans rights. We delve into her story and witness her journey from the beginning to the end, from incarceration to activism and her House of GG, we talk about all that and more in this episode. Trans rights are still crucial and under attack so please do your due diligence and Get Involved with your local agencies to stand for the much-needed change. Don't forget to rate our podcast and follow us on Spotify. We are posting an episode every Tuesday and Thursday at 10 am this month so you do not want to miss out. Socials: Instagram, Tiktok and Pintrest- @theamericanfuneral
This week, Rachel and Jared cover the trans elder, activist, and community leader Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, and the pre-Stonewall act of queer liberation activism, the Sip-In at Julius'! ✸ Content Warnings: This episode contains adult themes and language, such as mentions of poverty, sex work, death, murder, physical assault, arrest, and homophobia/transphobia. Miss Major Griffin-Gracy: Miss Major's Biography Page "TransVisionaries: How Miss Major Helped Spark the Modern Trans Movement" by Raquel Willis MAJOR! The Miss Major Film "What Trans Elder Miss Major Griffin-Gracy Wants You to Know" by Jeffrey Masters "Miss Major On Rioting At Stonewall: 'That Was 3 Nights Of Absolute Terror'" by James Michael Nichols Miss Major Interview from The Outwards Archive Julius' Sip-In: "The "Sip-In" at Julius' Bar in 1966" from the National Parks Service "Before the Stonewall Uprising, There Was the ‘Sip-In'" by Jim Farber "Remembering a 1966 'Sip-In' for Gay Rights" from NPR's Weekend Edition "Julius' Bar, site of historic gay 'sip-in,' threatened by pandemic" by Dan Avery "“Sip-In” takes place at Julius' Bar in New York City" from History.com's "This Day in History" Julius' from the NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project ✎ Make sure to send in your personal listener stories to historicallyreallygoodfriends@gmail.com to be read on the podcast! ✦ Feel free to rate, review, and subscribe wherever you listen. ☻ Give us a follow on Instagram @historicallyreally to see photos from today's episode! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week we discuss one of the living legends of the original Stonewall riots. Miss Major has lived all over the United States and effected change in each place. She continues to effect change still today while living in rural Arkansas. Instagram: @queericonspodcast Email: queericonspodcast@gmail.com Sources: https://missmajor.net/ https://www.them.us/story/transvisionaries-miss-major https://standwithtrans.org/miss-major-griffin-gracy/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSOGc3K9rHU&ab_channel=qoncbc https://www.blackwomenradicals.com/blog-feed/they-are-not-including-us-we-have-to-stand-up-miss-major-speaks-on-why-the-fight-to-end-state-violence-must-be-inclusive https://www.advocate.com/transgender/2021/2/23/what-trans-elder-miss-major-griffin-gracy-wants-you-know https://www.blackwomenradicals.com/blog-feed/they-are-not-including-us-we-have-to-stand-up-miss-major-speaks-on-why-the-fight-to-end-state-violence-must-be-inclusive https://www.astraeafoundation.org/ https://www.queerportraits.com/
This is a time machine!!!!!!! We're launching a new series on the podcast dedicated exclusively to the stories of LGBTQ+ elders. Over the last five years, it's the interviews with the oldest members of our community that have connected the most with our listeners. And that goes for me too. Speaking to people like Miss Major Griffin Gracy, Magora Kennedy, Cleve Jones, Charles Silverstein, and Tracey "Africa" Norman is where I've found the most inspiration. This Tuesday (3/1), we're kicking things off with Barbara Satin, a faith leader and 87-year-old trans woman from Minneapolis. If you have any suggestions for LGBTQ+ elders who have amazing stories that you think we should know about, shoot me a message. I'd love to hear about them. Here are links to the different voices heard in this episode: Mark Segal, Charles Silverstein, Ben Daniels (from The National Theatre in London's production of A Normal Heart), Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, and Kate Bornstein. LGBTQ&A is hosted by Jeffrey Masters and produced by The Advocate magazine, in partnership with GLAAD. Follow us on Twitter: @lgbtqpod
Happy LGBTQ+ History Month! Dr. Charles Silverstein talks about his 1973 presentation before the American Psychiatric Association that led to the removal of homosexuality from the list of mental illnesses in the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual). He also talks about working with the Gay Activist Alliance in the '70s, his landmark book. The Joy of Gay Sex, and how his relationship to sex has changed now that he's 86-years-old. The new documentary, CURED, premieres on PBS on October 11th. You can listen to our interview with the legendary trans elder, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy here: bit.ly/missmajor1 LGBTQ&A is hosted by Jeffrey Masters and produced by The Advocate magazine, in partnership with GLAAD. Come find us on Twitter to recommend a future guest: @lgbtqpod.
It's the 50TH EPISODE of Thanks, I Hate It. This week Brittany and Windsor talk about some prominent figures in LGBTQ history (and history in general). We discuss Rachel Maddow, Sylvia Rivera, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, Harvey Milk, Christine Jorgensen, Stormé DeLarverie, Karl Henrich Ulrichs, and Oscar Wilde. We only scratch the surface and you can expect many more excellence episodes! Thank you all for allowing up the platform and the support to bring 50 episodes to you all. We love you!
This week is a little different. Wit takes on the more serious topic of the Stonewall Uprising and four women of color who continued the LGBTQ+ movement afterwards (Stormé DeLarverie, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, Sylvia Rivera, and Marsha P. Joshnson). Dustin turns up the funny and tells us about the screwed up origins of nursery rhymes and delicious cookie men. As always, our humor is not suitable for most people. Enjoy!Donate to the Marsha P. Johnson Institute at https://marshap.org/
Dove Tale! Miss Major, one of the pioneers of transgender activism, is an OG champion of Black transgender women's rights in the prison industrial complex. She was one of the leaders of the Stonewell Riots, survivor of the Attica Prison Riots of 1971 and caregiver of her community during the outbreak of the AIDS epidemic in California.
Dove Tale! Miss Major, one of the pioneers of transgender activism, is an OG champion of Black transgender women's rights in the prison industrial complex. She was one of the leaders of the Stonewell Riots, survivor of the Attica Prison Riots of 1971 and caregiver of her community during the outbreak of the AIDS epidemic in California.
Dr. Imani Woody is the founding director and CEO of Mary’s House for Older Adults, Inc. She has a Ph.D. in Human Services, specializing in non-profit management. Dr. Imani has been an advocate of women, people of color and LGBT/Same Gender Loving issues for more than 20 years. Dr. Woody is a member of the National LGBT Elder Housing Initiative, and presented on LGBT housing issues at the White House. She is currently the Executive Director of Mary’s House for Older Adults, an LGBTQ-SGL friendly organization creating welcoming environments throughout the US including its first residence providing safe and affordable communal housing for adults over 60 in Washington, DC. You can reach Dr. Woody here. During the episode, Dr. Jane Fleishman mentions a recent article that she co-authored with Dr. Imani Woody, Mandy Carter, and Miss Major Griffin-Gracy in the Journal of Black Sexuality and Relationships. Here is the citation for that piece: Carter, M., Fleishman, J. M., Griffin-Gracy, M. M., Woody Macko, I. (2021). Black LGBTQ/SGL elders: A black transwoman, an African-American same-gender loving woman, and a black lesbian talking about sex with a cisgender white lesbian sex researcher. Journal of Black Sexuality and Research, 7(1), 1-20. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/781704 And if you’d like to find more shows, visit our website and please subscribe! We love our listeners and welcome your feedback. You can find us on Facebook and Instagram and Twitter. Or you can write to us at this address. We can’t wait to hear your thoughts. As always, thanks for listening!
The celebrated trans elder, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy talks about getting knocked out at the Stonewall uprising, her friendship with Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera, and achieving "icon" status. Miss Major is Executive Producer of the new docuseries, Trans in Trumpland (available on Topic.com and Amazon Prime). LGBTQ&A is hosted by Jeffrey Masters and produced by The Advocate magazine, in partnership with GLAAD. @lgbtqpod
We're back, baby. This year, you're going to hear from Tracey "Africa" Norman, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, Mark Segal, Brian Michael Smith, and Melissa Febos. I can't wait for you to listen. Want to recommend a guest? Come find and connect with me on Twitter: @jeffmasters1. LGBTQ&A is hosted by Jeffrey Masters and produced by The Advocate magazine, in partnership with GLAAD. @lgbtqpod
This legendary leader has spent decades advocating for transgender visibility and human rights. Her quote today is a reflection of her resilience and optimism. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Welcome back to the revolution. This week's edition, we're talking about a woman who is unapologetically herself in every situation, who's been an activist longer than I've been breathing, and is a veteran of the Stonewall Rebellion. Miss Major Griffin-Gacy. Stonewall Info: https://tinyurl.com/ybz7keaj Miss Major's website: https://https://missmajor.net/
We’ve got a few things to talk about - HBO Max’s decision to remove the film "Gone With the Wind" temporarily and who may have prompted that decision. It’s also Pride Month and hear about the "Major!" documentary (https://www.missmajorfilm.com/), based on the life of transgender elder Miss Major Griffin-Gracy. In my Encounter With a Celebrity (Icon) segment, listen to a story about my meeting with Rosa Parks and also hear about my passing for white dad’s own defiance.Music:"Jazz Addict’s Intro" by Cosimo Fogg(https://soundcloud.com/cosimo-fogg)Underground Magnolia website (http://undergroundmagnolia.com/) Send questions/comments and requests to contact@undergroundmagnolia.com. For more information on having your music featured, send an email.
The focus of this episode is to breakdown Impostor Syndrome. Coach Jon John opens up about his own struggles with Impostor Syndrome. He also gives tips on how to deal with the negative voices in your head that attempt to discourage you from accomplishing your goals and moving forward. Other topics discussed in this episode include: Major! the documentary available on Amazon Prime Instant Video. Miss Major Griffin-Gracy (born October 25, 1940), often referred to as Miss Major, is a trans woman activist and community leader for transgender rights, with a particular focus on women of color. Rayshard Brooks: Why I think he resisted arrest. Rayhard Brooks was a 27 year old who was shot and killed by an Atlanta Police Officer on the night of June 12th. Thanks for Listening!!
The Stonewall Riots were a flash point in LGBTQ history. After the riots that took place at the Stonewall Inn in June 1969, the LGBTQ civil rights movement went from handfuls of pioneering activists to a national movement mobilizing thousands. On this special episode we’ll hear what happened over the nights of the riots through archival audio of iconic transgender rights activists Sylvia Rivera, Marsha P. Johnson, and Miss Major Griffin-Gracy. NYPL's Jason Baumann returns for an interview with pioneering photojournalist and gay rights activist Kay Tobin Lahusen. Plus stories from Eric Marcus' podcast Making Gay History, and the story of Stormé DeLarverie from the archives at The Schomburg Center. Also mentioned: 'The Stonewall Reader' The exhibit 'Love & Resistance: Stonewall 50' Barbara Gittings and Kay Tobin Lahusen Photographs and Papers NYC Trans Oral History Project, including Miss Major's full length interview For more, listen to our previous episode “Before Stonewall” including an interview with writer and curator Hugh Ryan about his new book "When Brooklyn was Queer."
This is the second (okay, third) conversation with Andrea. We cover her coming out as a transgender woman while working in state government in Arkansas; starting the Arkansas Transgender Equality Coalition (ARTEC); introducing Bernie Sanders in Portland (the bird rally!); and finding her place in activism. Links below to people, places, and things discussed. Uppity Women is hosted by Stephanie Harris, founder of Women Lead Arkansas, a non-partisan nonprofit whose mission is to empower women and girls to engage in politics, policy, and leadership. This podcast is meant to showcase women (and men!) doing cool things; be a place for hard conversations we need to have before we can make progress (race, politics, feminism, etc.); bring people together to figure sh!t out and get stuff done; and generally thumb our noses at anyone who would tell us what we may or may not do as women. Links: Clinton School of Public Service: https://clintonschool.uasys.edu/ ARTEC: http://www.artranscoalition.org/ Decline to Sign wins: https://www.vox.com/identities/2018/4/6/17197910/anchorage-alaska-transgender-proposition-1 The Incredible Mr. Limpet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Incredible_Mr._Limpet Penelope (a mutual friend I use as an example), founder of Lucie's Place in Little Rock: https://www.luciesplace.org/ Miss Major Griffin-Gracy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_Major_Griffin-Gracy Stonewall Riots: https://stonewallforever.org/ Human Rights Campaign: https://www.hrc.org/ Center for Artistic Revolution: https://www.car4ar.org/ Bernie Sanders rally visited by bird: https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/03/26/471958688/bird-visits-bernie-sanders-rally-sparks-delight-on-twitter Andrea introduces Bernie: https://www.facebook.com/berniesanders/videos/trans-activist-andrea-zekis-introduces-bernie/1014952678559736/ Basic Rights Oregon: http://www.basicrights.org/ Shailene Woodley: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0940362/ Michael Stipe (REM): https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005468/ Ed Droste of Grizzly Bear: https://www.instagram.com/edroste/?hl=en Danni Askini: http://www.danniaskini.com/ Moda Center, Portland: https://rosequarter.com/about-us/venues/moda-center/ VooDoo Donuts: https://www.voodoodoughnut.com/ M Ward: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1943488/ The Thermals: http://www.thethermals.com/ The Dandy Warhols: https://www.dandywarhols.com/ Sen. Jeff Merkley: https://www.merkley.senate.gov/ Sarah McBride: https://www.hrc.org/staff/sarah-mcbride Marie Kondo: https://konmari.com/ --- 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/uppitywomenar/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/uppitywomenar/support
This week, Shan teaches Alison about trans activist and community leader, Miss Major Griffin-Gracy! Please donate to her retirement fund at fundly.com/missmajor
Kicking off our weekly Pride Month episodes by talking about a transgender woman of color, activist, former sex worker, survivor of prison incarceration, and member of the Stonewall Riots. Round Table: Inaccessibility of LGBT History Music: “So Far So Good” by Jonathan Coulton Research Lead: Miri
The whores are back with the fantastically feisty Ceyenne Doroshow (@doroshow) in Part II of their snow day extravaganza. Kaytlin (@kaytlinbailey) and Wendi (@wendibird82) respond to a listener email and remind us that racists can be sex workers too, then get down to business by singing the praises of trailblazing trans woman Miss Major. After being misgendered and housed with male inmates, she became one of the key negotiators in the Attica Prison Riots in 1971 and went on to work as an advocate for trans women's rights within the prison system. Miss Major also participated in the Stonewall Riots and eventually founded the Gigi House, an organization dedicated to preserving and celebrating the stories of trans people throughout history. The ladies also have a very real discussion about the class divisions within the sex worker community, the perversion of historical narratives of trans people AND address the issue of cat murder parks in Peru. ALSO, how can notable trans people better support their community? Who in hell was the stylist for the Kaitlin Jenner shoot?? PLUS tips on which shades to avoid at the tanning salon. GLITS Inc. Follow GLITS on twitter Support the show on Patreon *** Email the show: @ theoldestprofessionpodcast@gmail.com Twitter: @oldpropodcast Instagram: @oldpropodcast Support the show on Patreon FOLLOW KAYTLIN Twitter: @kaytlinbailey Instagram: @kaytlinbailey FOLLOW WENDI Twitter: @wendistarling Instagram: @wendibird82 *** Produced by Mary Kelly Funky One Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Eve Parker Finley Celebrates International Women's Day in the Transiest way possible. She profiles women such as Sylvia Rivera and Marsha P. Johnson gay activist in the time of Stonewall and co-founders of STAR (Street Transvestite Action Revolution) and educates us on other women we should know including Miss Major Griffin-Gracy executive Director of the Transgender Gender Variant Intersex Justice Project. Real radical radio and some music by Erica from the Bay Area - and Jess Manniquin-Head of Lonely Boa
In this week's episode of Fortification: Spiritual Sustenance for Movement Leadership, Caitlin Breedlove, Vice President of Movement Leadership at Auburn Seminary is joined by Miss Major Griffin-Gracy. Miss Major Griffin-Gracy Miss Major Griffin-Gracy is one of the original pioneers of transgender activism and a champion for Transgender Women of Color, Miss Major leads the cause for transgender rights in the prison industrial complex. She took part in the Stonewall riots. Miss Major is also the Executive Director Emeritus for the Transgender GenderVariant Intersex Justice Project (TGI Justice Project) and founder of the Haus of GiGi.
Zoe Samudzi is a black feminist writer whose work has appeared in a number of spaces including The New Inquiry, Warscapes, Truthout, ROAR Magazine, Teen Vogue,BGD, Bitch Media, and Verso, among others. She is also a member of the 2017/18 Public Imagination cohort of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA) Fellows Program, and she is a member of the Black Aesthetic, an Oakland-based group and film series exploring the multitudes and diversities of black imagination and creativity. She is presently a Sociology PhD student at the University of California, San Francisco in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences where academic interests include biomedicalization theory, productions of race and gender, and transgender health. She is a recipient of the 2016-17 Eugene Cota-Robles Fellowship. Her dissertation "'I don’t believe I should be treated like a second citizen by anybody': Narratives of agency and exclusion amongst male and transgender female sex workers in Cape Town, South Africa" engages hegemonic gender constructs in South Africa as they affect identity construction and health of transgender women and cisgender men in sex work. Zoe sits down with Brett to discuss black feminism and queer theory. Topics Include: black feminism, marxism and anarchism, schools as institutions of white supremacy, rape culture, queer (and quare) theory, cis-normativity in medical science, dominant constructions of womanhood, the Jezebel Myth, and much more! Here is Zoe's website: http://www.zoesamudzi.com/ Follow Zoe on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ztsamudzi Recommendations by Zoe for further research: “Ok wanted to shoutout Black trans women doing dope work (in no order): - Raquel Willis (an amazing writer and a national organizer with the Transgender Law Center) - Lourdes Ashley Hunter (Executive Director of the Trans Women of Color Collective) - Reina Gossett (writer, director, and producer of Happy Birthday, Marsha) - CeCe McDonald (a fundraiser for her: https://www.youcaring.com/cecemcdonald-1003185) - Miss Major Griffin-Gracy (an iconic community activist and organizer, former Executive Director of the TGI Justice Project) - Venus Selenite (a writer, performance artist, and cultural critic) - Kat Blaque (a YouTuber making content and commentary around trans rights & social justice in general) - Monica Roberts (a blogger/writer and trans rights activist) - Janetta Johnson (activist/organizer and current Executive Director of the TGI Justice Project) - L'lerrét Jazelle Ailith (a blogger/writer and Communications Manager for the BYP100) - Ahya Simone (classically trained harpist and activist) - Elle Hearns (founder and Executive Director of the Marsha P. Johnson Institute) - Janet Mock - Laverne Cox Also wanted to give a non-exhaustive list of black queer and trans/non-binary thinkers that are doing great writing and scholarly work related to identity that I've really appreciated (again in no order): - Barbara Smith - Che Gossett - C. Riley Snorton - Hari Ziyad - Tyler Ford - Kortney Ziegler - Derrais Carter - Lynée Denise - Kai M. Green - Joshua Allen - Jamal Lewis - TJ Tallie - Shay Akil McClean - Kopano Ratele - Darnell Moore - Myles E. Johnson - Zanele Muholi - E. Patrick Harris - Lyle Ashton Harris - Cheryl Dunye - Ashleigh Shackleford - Devyn Springer ——- Outro Music: 'Badu' by Blackerface, off the album "Mississippi Goddam". You can find their WONDERFUL music here: https://blackerface.bandcamp.com Follow them on FB here: https://www.facebook.com/faceoppressors/ Intro music by The String-Bo String Duo, you can find their music here: https://tsbsd.bandcamp.com/releases Donate to our Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/RevLeftRadio This podcast is officially affiliated with the Nebraska Left Coalition and the Omaha GDC.
Erik Sherman on his book "Out at Home: The True Story of Glenn Burke, Baseball's First Openly Gay Player". Director Annalise Ophelian, on her new documentary MAJOR!, a film that explores the life and campaigns of Miss Major Griffin-Gracy, a formerly incarcerated Black transgender elder and activist who has been fighting for the rights of trans women of color for over 40 years.