
TRANSCRIPT: Translash Podcast Episode 76, ‘Trans Fashion Week’
Imara: Hey fam, it’s me, Imara. Welcome to the TransLash Podcast. A show where we tell trans stories to save
Imara: Hey fam, it’s me, Imara. Welcome to the TransLash Podcast. A show where we tell trans stories to save
Learn about The New York Times’ publisher AG Sulzberger in Episode 5 of The Anti-Trans Hate Machine Animated Series.
Nathalie Nia Faulk (she/they), a Black trans femme from Louisiana, shares her thoughts on Katrina and New Orleans trans leadership.
“Our Flag Means Death” star Vico Ortiz weighs in on the SAG-AFTRA strike and how QTPOC writers and actors are disproportionately impacted.
Looking for ways to help queer and trans people impacted by the wildfires and devastation in Maui? Explore native-led resources
“In India, members of the transgender community have always been polarized — revered as holy beings or reviled for being different. The Aravani Art Project sought to change this by creating safe spaces for them to express themselves.”
“None of these instances of hope are all encompassing, after all, there are no magic bullets in civil rights struggles. But taken together, they all add up to hope for trans people. And we could all use a little hope right now.”
“If Appalachia is not as inhospitable to trans and nonbinary people as the dominant societal narrative would have us believe, a world of possibility opens up for LGBTQ+ people who may feel pushed by queer culture to flee rural areas for the city, even though they find themselves more at home in more sparsely populated areas away from the coasts.”
Imara: Hey fam, it’s me, Imara. Welcome to the TransLash Podcast. A show where we tell trans stories to save
Learn about The New York Times’ publisher AG Sulzberger in Episode 5 of The Anti-Trans Hate Machine Animated Series.
Nathalie Nia Faulk (she/they), a Black trans femme from Louisiana, shares her thoughts on Katrina and New Orleans trans leadership.
“Our Flag Means Death” star Vico Ortiz weighs in on the SAG-AFTRA strike and how QTPOC writers and actors are disproportionately impacted.
Looking for ways to help queer and trans people impacted by the wildfires and devastation in Maui? Explore native-led resources
“In India, members of the transgender community have always been polarized — revered as holy beings or reviled for being different. The Aravani Art Project sought to change this by creating safe spaces for them to express themselves.”
“None of these instances of hope are all encompassing, after all, there are no magic bullets in civil rights struggles. But taken together, they all add up to hope for trans people. And we could all use a little hope right now.”
“If Appalachia is not as inhospitable to trans and nonbinary people as the dominant societal narrative would have us believe, a world of possibility opens up for LGBTQ+ people who may feel pushed by queer culture to flee rural areas for the city, even though they find themselves more at home in more sparsely populated areas away from the coasts.”
TransLash tells trans stories to save trans lives. As a trusted source for journalists, thought-leaders, movement activists, researchers, and those wanting to know about trans people, we produce narratives about and for the trans community—accurately and reliably. At a time when disinformation about trans people is being used to undermine democracy and human rights, TransLash Media serves as a beacon of hope through the voices that we share with the world.
TransLash tells trans stories to save trans lives. As a trusted source for journalists, thought-leaders, movement activists, researchers, and those wanting to know about trans people, we produce narratives about and for the trans community—accurately and reliably. At a time when disinformation about trans people is being used to undermine democracy and human rights, TransLash Media serves as a beacon of hope through the voices that we share with the world.