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On episode #85 I have the absolute pleasure of yarning with Professor Chelsea Watego. Chelsea is a Munanjahli and South Sea Islander woman with over 20 years of experience working within Indigenous health as a health worker and researcher. Chelsea's work has drawn attention to the role of race in the production of health inequalities.Chelsea is a prolific writer and public intellectual, having written for @indigenousx NITV, The Guardian, and The Conversation. She is a founding board member of Inala Wangarra, an Indigenous community development association within her community, a Director of the Institute for Collaborative Race Research, and was one half of the Wild Black Women radio/podcast show, but most importantly, she is also a proud mum to five beautiful children. In 2022, Chelsea's groundbreaking work, Another Day in the Colony was longlisted for the Stella Prize. We yarn about her academic and career achievements, life as a mother to 5 children and we share stories of the battles we face of justifying our Aboriginality to non Indigenous people. A very long over due yarn that's just the first of many to come.Recommendations throughout this episode: https://icrr.com.auhttps://au.linkedin.com/in/chelsea-watego-5349aba9https://www.qut.edu.au/about/our-people/academic-profiles/chelsea.bondWebsite: www.blackmagicwoman.com.auFollow us on Instagram - @blackmagicwomanpodcastThe Black Magic Woman Podcast is hosted by Mundanara Bayles and is an uplifting conversational style program featuring mainly Aboriginal guests and explores issues of importance to Aboriginal people and communities. Mundanara is guided by Aboriginal Terms of Reference and focuses more on who people are rather than on what they do.If you enjoyed this episode, please ‘Subscribe' on Apple Podcasts or ‘Follow' on your Spotify app and tell your friends and family about us! If you'd like to contact us, please email, info@blackmagicwoman.com.auSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/black-magic-woman. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sorry for the occasional distortion in this episode! Zac has "hauled in" Noon and given him a "dressing down" over the audio quality. Noon refutes that the meeting ever took place.CW for the names of Indigenous people who have died : 23:22 - 26:58Entree: Sex services and the NDISCoronas/Broken Clock: Reserve Bank Governor on Jobseeker, Barnaby Joyce agreesPositivity Corner: Gay conversion therapy banned in VictoriaFirst Nations: Public drunkenness laws repealed in VictoriaFashy Australia: Héritier Lumumba and systemic racism at Collingwood Football Club,; the media response, especially The ProjectUFU: Craig Kelly shenanigans feat. Scott Morrison and Tanya PlibersekSPOTW: Emerging Aboriginal Elder FATE Course from Travis De Vries of the Broriginals podcastMains: What’s up with Google, Facebook, and paying for newsWatch a clip of Sam Connor on The Drum: twitter.com/ABCthedrum/status/1357258742891356163Listen to Aamer Rahman guest on Wild Black Women: 989fm.com.au/wild-black-women/wildblackwomen/Support the show: patreon.com/AuspolSnackpod
After the recent announcement that Wild Black Women were hanging … Continued
In the backdrop of the Black Lives Matters protests, the editors talk to two of Queensland's most prominent Murri radio voices, Dr Chelsea Bond and Angelina Hurley from the Wild Black Women podcast. This week's guests talk about slavery in Australia, protesting during COVID-19 and the Australian media's complicity in the discrimination of Aboriginal people. A lot of people get dragged in this interview, including Trevor Noah. **The audio on this episode buffers sometimes as we had minor technical difficulties. Thank you for listening** https://989fm.com.au/category/listen/programs/wild-black-women/
Wild Black Women yarn latest news and reflect on the … Continued
Today on Wild Black Women, the girls spoke about Protests … Continued
It’s Reconciliation Week, so catch up with the latest goss … Continued
Are you trying to enjoy your isolation with possums running … Continued
This week Imojen (white girl correspondent) joins the Wild Black Women to explain the … Continued
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Acknowledgement of country News headlines with Cait Kelly In episode 6 of Liberation Loops, Carly speaks with Lauren Caulfield. Lauren works at the intersection of interpersonal and state-sanctioned gender violence, and is involved in training, organising work and community-based interventions to violence. She also coordinates the “Policing Family Violence: Changing the Story” project, which is a collaborative, integrated community legal and survivor support project that responds to harm and criminalisation of people through family violence policing. Max speaks with Apryl Watson, daughter of Aunty Tanya Day, on the open letter and petition from families of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander deaths in custody calling on the Australian Governments to urgently release people from prison to prevent COVID-19 deaths. Scheherazade speaks with Dr Shakira Hussein, a writer and academic in multiculturalism and Muslim studies at the National Centre for Excellence in Islamic Studies, University of Melbourne, about the intersection of race, islamophobia and COVID-19.Priya speaks with Chelsea Bond, a Munanjahli and South Sea Islander woman and long-term Aboriginal Health Worker and researcher. Chelsea is an Associate Professor at the University of Queensland’s Poche Health Centre for Indigenous Health, and a co-host of the show Wild Black Women on 98.9FM in Meanjin. They discuss the public discussion around the 250th anniversary of Cook’s invasion.To intro this segment we hear a poem by Neika Lehman titled ‘Cook 250’. Neika Lehman is a writer and artist living and working on Kulin Country. Neika grew up in Tasmania | lutruwita and descends from the Trawlwoolway peoples of north east Tasmania. Their ancestral and contemporary stories inform Neika’s written and visual practice.
Another fun episode this week with some extra-special memes, adorable tweets, best-and-or-blurst takes, political shenangians, and a deep dive from Zac into everyone's favourite racist billionaire mining magnate, Andrew 'Twiggy' Forrest. Support the show: www.patreon.com/AuspolSnackpodListen to Wild Black Women: https://989fm.com.au/listen/programs/wild-black-women/wild-black-woman/
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Tuesday 17 March 2020 Acknowledgement of country// News headlines// Anthony Kelly, CEO of the Flemington-Kensington Legal Service discussing the Police Accountability Project’s new police complaints chat bot// An excerpt from Wild Black Women’s live show at Perth Festival. Angelina Hurley and Chelsea Bond were joined by Aunty Professor Pat Dudgeon and Aunty Gningala Yaran-Mark// Helen Dickinson from the Centre for Excellence in Disability and Health talks about their recent report that provides recommendations for the disability sector to respond to COVID-19// SONGS// Sheryl Crow - If It Makes You HappyEmma Russack - If You Could See Me Now
Dr Chelsea Bond - Is Feminism for us? This chat is packed to bursting with wow-moments, takeaways and t-shirt worthy quotes that will have you thinking for days. We can’t wait for you to hear it and tell us what you think. This is exactly what we’re here for, deeper conversation with incredible Sisters about the things that matter to us. We love sisterhood, so it’s scary to admit that it doesn't always come easily and that in some cases, it comes with a lot of baggage. Talking is the first step to making things better and Chelsea was brilliant. She’s a woman who really shows up and this conversation is fun, fierce and full of warmth. She was incredibly generous in sharing stories that reveal where she’s landed (on that day anyhow) on this important question. Chelsea is an Aboriginal (Munanjahli) and South Sea Islander Australian. She works as a researcher, health worker and Senior Lecturer. She's also the co-host of the brilliant Wild Black Women show on 989FM and a must follow on twitter. This conversation is very real, so there’s a little bit of strong language. It's also packed with the type of intelligent, yet accessible analysis that Chelsea is renowned for and we managed to laugh a lot too. My goodness black women are magic. There’s so much to learn when we have space to really #listentoblackwomen We’ve had this on repeat and found different gems every time. So it really is worth listening to a couple of times, maybe grab a cuppa or a journal in between and come back to see how you feel and what connects/doesn't connect next time around. It’ll make you think, laugh and expand a little. We definitely did. The full transcript is available on heyauntypod.com Lovely folks have been getting in touch to ask how to support us. Thank you! writing a review on apple podcasts is the best bet for now and maybe sharing the pod with your friends. Cheers, enjoy! PS - The correct Alice Walker's quotation is "womanism is to feminism as purple is to lavender" Not sure where lavender came from, but love do love all shades of purple :)
Tuesday Breakfast 4 June 2019 7.00 am Acknowledgement of Country7.05 am Chris Woods with news headlines7.30 am Anya speaks to Courtney from the St Kilda Legal Service about the Legal Issues for Professionals Fact Sheets' launch7.40 am The crew discuss sex work legislation, an event this Wednesday to discuss abolishing Public Drunkenness Laws, last night's Australian Story on Debbie Kilroy and the recent arrest of Kearah Ronan.8.45 am We hear an excerpt from Wild Black Women, a program on 98.9fm, an Indigenous community radio station in Meanjin. The program is hosted by Dr Chelsea Bond and Angelina Hurley and in this segment, they discuss their thoughts on Reconciliation Week and on having the first Indigenous minister for Indigenous affairs. 8.10 am Zoe Milah Dejesus, a Puerto-Rican/ American illustrator and painter from New Jersey, joins us to discuss her upcoming art exhibition "Buy Me Dinner First". We discuss this amazing series which explores sexuality and intimacy as well as what folks can expect at the opening on June 21st. Songssong: Black Tieartist: Grace Petriesong: Humming Birdartist: P-UniQuesong: Tricksartist: Stella Donnelly